Controlling the Adsorption and Release of Ocular Drugs in Metal–Organic Frameworks: Effect of Polar Functional Groups
Science & Technology
Metal–organic frameworks
Polar functional groups
Nitrogen Dioxide
IN-VITRO
02 engineering and technology
SERIES
MOFS
Chemistry
DELIVERY
Pharmaceutical Preparations
GLAUCOMA
Release
Brimonidine Tartrate
Physical Sciences
UIO-66
Ocular drugs
Chemistry, Inorganic & Nuclear
Humans
BRIMONIDINE TARTRATE
Adsorption
0210 nano-technology
Metal-Organic Frameworks
DOI:
10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02539
Publication Date:
2022-11-15T19:41:31Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
A series of UiO-66 materials with different functional groups (-H, -NH2, and -NO2) have been evaluated for the adsorption and release of a common ocular drug such as brimonidine tartrate. UiO-66 samples were synthesized under solvothermal conditions and activated by solvent exchange with ethanol. Experimental results suggest that the incorporation of surface functionalities gives rise to the development of structural defects (missing linker defects) but without altering the basic topology of the UiO-66 framework. These defects improve the adsorption performance of the parent metal-organic framework (MOF), while the bulkier functionalities infer slower release kinetics, with the associated benefits for prolonged delivery of brimonidine. Among the evaluated MOFs, defective UiO-66-NO2 can be proposed as the most promising candidate due to the combination of a larger brimonidine volumetric uptake (680 mg/cm3), a prolonged delivery (period of up to 25 days), a small particle size, and a larger instability. Contrariwise, at high concentrations UiO-66-NO2 has higher toxicity toward human retinal pigment epithelium cells (ARPE-19) compared to the pure and NH2-functionalized UiO-66.
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