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Biophys J, April 2001, p. 1703-1711, Vol. 80, No. 4
Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-1560 USA
The design of vesicles that become unstable at an easily
tuned value of pH is of great interest for targeted drug delivery. We
present a microscopic theory for two forms of such vesicles. A model of
lipids introduced by us previously is applied to a system of ionizable
anionic lipid and permanently charged cationic lipid. We calculate the
pH at which the lamellar phase becomes unstable with respect to an
inverted hexagonal one, a value that depends continuously on the system
composition. Identifying this instability with that displayed by
unilamellar vesicles undergoing fusion, we obtain very good agreement
with the recent experimental data of Hafez, Ansell, and Cullis,
(2000, Biophys. J. 79:1438-1446) on the pH at which
fusion occurs versus vesicle composition. We explicate the mechanism in
terms of the role of the counterions. This understanding suggests that
a system of a neutral, nonlamellar-forming lipid stabilized by an
anionic lipid would serve equally well for preparing tunable,
pH-sensitive vesicles. Our calculations confirm this. Further, we show
that both forms of vesicle have the desirable feature of exhibiting a
regime in which the pH at instability is a rapidly varying function of
the vesicle composition.
Biophys J, April 2001, p. 1703-1711, Vol. 80, No. 4
© 2001 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/01/04/1703/09 $2.00
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