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Biophys J, October 2002, p. 2064-2073, Vol. 83, No. 4
Membrane Biophysics Laboratory, Molecular and Cellular Biophysics Department, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, New York 14263 USA
Anionic phospholipids, but not cationic or neutral
phospholipids, were found to enhance the transdermal transport of
molecules by electroporation. When added as liposomes to the milieus of water-soluble molecules to be delivered through the epidermis of
porcine skin by electroporation, these phospholipids enhance, by one to
two orders of magnitude, the transdermal flux. Encapsulation of
molecules in liposomes is not necessary. Dimyristoylphosphatidylserine (DMPS), phosphatidylserine from bovine brain (brain-PS),
dioleoylphosphatidylserine (DOPS), and dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol
(DOPG) were used to test factors affecting the potency of anionic lipid
transport enhancers. DMPS with saturated acyl chains was found to be a
much more potent transport enhancer than those with unsaturated acyl
chains (DOPS and DOPG). There was no headgroup preference. Saturated
DMPS was also more effective in delaying resistance recovery after
pulsing, and with a greater affinity in the epidermis after pulsing.
Using fluorescent carboxyl fluorescein and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled Dextrans as test water-soluble molecules for transport, and rhodamine-labeled phospholipids to track anionic phospholipids, we
found, by conventional and confocal fluorescence microscopy, that
transport of water-soluble molecules was localized in local transport
spots or regions (LTRs) created by the electroporation pulses. Anionic
phospholipids, especially DMPS, were located at the center of the LTRs
and spanned the entire thickness of the stratum corneum (SC). The
degree of saturation of anionic phospholipids made no difference in the
densities of LTRs created. We deduce that, after being driven into the
epidermis by negative electric pulses, saturated anionic phospholipids
mix and are retained better by the SC lipids. Anionic lipids prefer
loose layers or vesicular rather than multilamellar forms, thereby
prolonging the structural recovery of SC lipids to the native
multilamellar form. In the presence of 1 mg/ml DMPS in the transport
milieu, the flux of FITC-Dextran-4k was enhanced by 80-fold and reached
175 µg/cm2/min. Thus, the use of proper lipid enhancers
greatly extends the upper size limit of transportable chemicals.
Understanding the mechanism of lipid enhancers enables one to
rationally design better enhancers for transdermal drug and vaccine
delivery by electroporation.
Biophys J, October 2002, p. 2064-2073, Vol. 83, No. 4
© 2002 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/02/10/2064/10 $2.00
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