open access publication

Article, 2024

High-yield fabrication of monodisperse multilayer nanofibrous microparticles for advanced oral drug delivery applications

Heliyon, ISSN 2405-8440, Volume 10, 10, 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e30844

Contributors

Ajalloueian F. 0000-0001-5061-827X (Corresponding author) [1] Eklund Thamdrup L.H. 0000-0002-9498-1529 [1] Mazzoni C. 0000-0002-0988-3108 [1] Petersen R.S. [1] Keller S.S. 0000-0003-4108-1305 [1] Boisen A. 0000-0002-9918-6567 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Technical University of Denmark
  2. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Recent advances in the use of nano- and microparticles in drug delivery, cell therapy, and tissue engineering have led to increasing attention towards nanostructured microparticulate formulations for maximum benefit from both nano- and micron sized features. Scalable manufacturing of monodisperse nanostructured microparticles with tunable size, shape, content, and release rate remains a big challenge. Current technology, mainly comprises complex multi-step chemical procedures with limited control over these aspects. Here, we demonstrate a novel technique for high-yield fabrication of monodisperse monolayer and multilayer nanofibrous microparticles (MoNami and MuNaMi respectively). The fabrication procedure includes sequential electrospinning followed by micro-cutting at room temperature and transfer of particles for collection. The big advantage of the introduced technique is the potential to apply several polymer-drug combinations forming multilayer microparticles enjoying extracellular matrix (ECM)-mimicking architecture with tunable release profile. We demonstrate the fabrication and study the factors affecting the final three-dimensional structure. A model drug is encapsulated into a three-layer sheet (PLGA-pullulan-PLGA), and we demonstrate how the release profile changes from burst to sustain by simply cutting particles out of the electrospun sheet. We believe our fabrication method offers a unique and facile platform for realizing advanced microparticles for oral drug delivery applications.

Keywords

Compactness, Micro-cutting, Multilayer nanofibrous microparticles, Oral drug delivery, Sequential electrospinning, Tunable release

Funders

  • Villum Fonden
  • Novo Nordisk Fonden
  • Danmarks Grundforskningsfond

Data Provider: Elsevier