Journal: bioRxiv
Article Title: Disc-Toroid Hybrid Lipid Nanoparticles for Efficient Drug Encapsulation and Subcutaneous Delivery
doi: 10.1101/2025.07.20.665764
Figure Lengend Snippet: Drug encapsulation and quantification. ( A ) A schematic representation illustrating two alternative approaches for the indirect determination of the encapsulation efficiency of LNP, using AF4 coupled to either a UV-Vis detector or a fluorescence detector. A collection of small drug molecules filtered through the membrane of the AF4 channel is quantified using a pre-calibrated UV-Vis detector. The large drug-loaded particles separated along the channel are detected using the fluorescence detector. ( B1 ) Elution profile showing the UV-Vis signal of quinine, with the cross-flow coupled to the UV-Vis detector. Wavelength set at 250 nm. ( B2 ) The calibration curve is generated by injecting several concentrations of quinine, enabling the quantification of quinine present in the cross-flow waste. Wavelength set at 250 nm. ( B3 ) Elution profile showing the UV-Vis signal of LNP5 and LNP5-Q, respectively. The cross-flow is coupled to the UV-Vis detector, set to a wavelength of 250 nm. C1) and C2) Fluorescence detection of the LNPs shows that the quinine is located in the particle due to increased intensity of the fluorescence signal at the same elution volume as the particle. The concentration of the particles is kept the same; thus, the increasing absorption intensity and broader absorption wavelength after excitation at 250 and 350 nm are the result of the quinine in the loaded LNP5-Q-B4 compared to the pure LNP5-WS-B4.
Article Snippet: AF4 measurements were performed with an Eclipse Neon Asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) system (Wyatt Technologies Corp., Germany).
Techniques: Encapsulation, Fluorescence, Membrane, Generated, Concentration Assay