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Journal ArticleDOI

Taxol-lipid interactions: taxol-dependent effects on the physical properties of model membranes.

TLDR
It is demonstrated that taxol incorporated into liposomes penetrates into the acyl chain domain of the bilayer and alters the physical properties of both artificial and biological membranes.
Abstract
Taxol (paclitaxel) is a diterpenoid anticancer agent undergoing intensive human clinical evaluation. The poor aqueous solubility of taxol necessitates administration in excipients causing a variety of adverse effects, including anaphylactoid hypersensitivity reactions. Recently, taxol has been formulated in better-tolerated drug carriers such as liposomes. We investigated the conformation of taxol and the interaction of taxol with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) liposomes using fluorescence, circular dichroism, differential scanning calorimetry, fluorescence polarization, and X-ray diffraction. The conformation of taxol in DPPC membranes was similar to that observed in nonpolar solvents such as chloroform. Taxol was found to partition into the bilayer, perturbing the hydrocarbon chain conformation. The taxol C13 side chain was found to be fluorescent, and it displays an environment-sensitive shift in emission spectrum; taxol fluorescence was used to confirm the insertion of the drug into the bilayer. Taxol induces a broadening of the DPPC phase transition, and the location of the drug in the bilayer depends on drug concentration. Incorporation of taxol affects other physical properties of the bilayer such as the lipid order parameter, and this fluidizing effect was also observed upon incorporation of taxol in biological membranes isolated from basolateral plasma membranes of rat liver. These studies demonstrate that taxol incorporated into liposomes penetrates into the acyl chain domain of the bilayer and alters the physical properties of both artificial and biological membranes.

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Patent

Anti-angiogenic compositions and methods of use

TL;DR: In this article, an anti-angiogenic factor and a polymeric carrier were used for embolization of blood vessels and eliminating biliary, urethral, esophageal, and tracheal/bronchial obstructions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micelles from lipid derivatives of water-soluble polymers as delivery systems for poorly soluble drugs

TL;DR: This review article focuses on micelles prepared from conjugates of water-soluble polymers, such as polyethylene glycol or polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP), with phospholipids or long-chain fatty acids, and considers the preparation of targeted immunomicelles with specific antibodies attached to their surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of cholesterol on liposome stability and on in vitro drug release

TL;DR: Using 70:30 % ratio (known in literature as 2:1), it is possible to reach the most stable formulation to guarantee a controlled and reproducible release for drugs with different physicochemical characteristics and pharmaceutical applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Release of hydrophobic molecules from polymer micelles into cell membranes revealed by Förster resonance energy transfer imaging

TL;DR: The results suggest a membrane-mediated pathway for cellular uptake of hydrophobic molecules preloaded in polymeric micelles, and a putative role of the PEG shell in the molecular transport from micelle to membrane is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enzyme-instructed molecular self-assembly confers nanofibers and a supramolecular hydrogel of taxol derivative.

TL;DR: This approach promises a general method to create nanofibers of therapeutic molecules that have a dual role, as both the delivery vehicle and the drug itself.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Taxol: A Novel Investigational Antimicrotubule Agent

TL;DR: Taxol's unique mechanism of action, its spectrum of preclinical antitumor activity, and tumor responses in early clinical trials have generated renewed interest in pursuing its development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nature of the Thermal pretransition of synthetic phospholipids: dimyristolyl- and dipalmitoyllecithin.

TL;DR: The hydrated synthetic lecithins, dimyristoyl and dipalmitoyllecithin, undergo two thermal transitions, a broad low enthalpy "pretransition" prior to the sharp first-order "chain-melting" transition and a structural transformation from a one-dimensional lamellar to a two-dimensional monoclinic lattice consisting of lipid lamellae distorted by a periodic ripple.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluorescence Depolarization Studies of Phase Transitions and Fluidity in Phospholipid Bilayers. 2. Two-Component Phosphatidylcholine Liposomes

TL;DR: The fluorescence deplorarization associated with the hydrophobic fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene is used to monitor changes in fluidity accompanying the gel-liquid crystalline phase transition in phosphatidylcholine dispersions, and phase diagrams are interpreted to suggest that the miscibilities of the lipids studied are markedly different in small, single-lamellar vesicles and large multilameLLar lip
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