Chemical Sensors Based on Molecularly Imprinted Polymers Can Determine Drug Release Kinetics from Nanocarriers without Filtration, Centrifugation, and Dialysis Steps.
Zeynab SoosaniBehzad RezaeiEsmaeil Heydari-BafrooeiAli Asghar EnsafiPublished in: ACS sensors (2023)
With the development of drug delivery systems, the use of nanomaterials for slow, targeted, and effective drug release has grown significantly. To ensure the quality of performance, it is essential to obtain drug release profiles from therapeutic nanoparticles prior to in vivo testing. Typically, the methods of monitoring the drug release profile from nanoparticle drug delivery systems include one or more filtration, separation, and sampling steps, with or without membrane, which cause several systematic errors and make the process time-consuming. Here, the release rate of doxorubicin as a model drug from liposome as a nanocarrier was determined via highly selective binding of released doxorubicin to the doxorubicin-imprinted electropolymerized polypyrrole as a molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP). Incubation of the MIP-modified substrate with imprinted cavities complementary to doxorubicin molecules in the releasing medium leads to the binding of released doxorubicin molecules to cavities. The drug trapped in the cavities is determined by one of the analytical methods depending on its signaling properties. In this work, due to the favorable electrochemical properties of doxorubicin, the voltammetry method was used for quantitative analysis of released doxorubicin. The voltammetric oxidation peak current intensity of doxorubicin on the surface of the electrode was enhanced by increasing the release time. This membranelle platform allows fast, reliable, and simple monitoring of drug release profiles without any sample preparation, filtration, and centrifugation in buffer and blood serum samples.