2017 Annual Meeting
(496h) Degradation of Phospholipid Vesicles By Phospholipases
Authors
Degradation kinetics of liposomes were measured in situ using dynamic light scattering with temporal resolution of one second. Morphologies of the giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) during degradation were observed via fluorescence microscopy. Molecular packing of lipid monolayers at the aqueous-air interface before and after enzyme adsorption and degradation were quantified using X-ray reflectivity and grazing incidence diffraction (GID).
Threshold concentrations of phospholipases were identified: above the threshold concentration, liposomes are quickly degraded in a few seconds to minutes; below the threshold concentration, liposomes remain stable for a long period. Therefore, it is possible to optimize vesicle design to release therapeutic payloads at phospholipase (such as sPLA2) concentrations around 1 mg/ml, corresponding to the enzyme concentration near cancer, inflammation, or bleeding sites.