Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients

Abstract Nanoemulsions have become ideal candidates for loading hydrophobic active ingredients and enhancing their bioavailability in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetic industries. However, the lack of versatile carrier platforms for nanoemulsions hinders advanced control over their release beha...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liang‐Hsun Chen, Li‐Chiun Cheng, Patrick S. Doyle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-10-01
Series:Advanced Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202001677
id doaj-23435167ae3d4f2dbab3851e5a977c36
record_format Article
spelling doaj-23435167ae3d4f2dbab3851e5a977c362020-11-25T03:38:21ZengWileyAdvanced Science2198-38442020-10-01720n/an/a10.1002/advs.202001677Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active IngredientsLiang‐Hsun Chen0Li‐Chiun Cheng1Patrick S. Doyle2Department of Chemical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge MA 02139 USADepartment of Chemical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge MA 02139 USADepartment of Chemical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge MA 02139 USAAbstract Nanoemulsions have become ideal candidates for loading hydrophobic active ingredients and enhancing their bioavailability in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetic industries. However, the lack of versatile carrier platforms for nanoemulsions hinders advanced control over their release behavior. In this work, a method is developed to encapsulate nanoemulsions in alginate capsules for the controlled delivery of lipophilic active ingredients. Functional nanoemulsions loaded with active ingredients and calcium ions are first prepared, followed by encapsulation inside alginate shells. The intrinsically high viscosity of the nanoemulsions ensures the formation of spherical capsules and high encapsulation efficiency during the synthesis. Moreover, a facile approach is developed to measure the nanoemulsion release profile from capsules through UV–vis measurement without an additional extraction step. A quantitative analysis of the release profiles shows that the capsule systems possess a tunable, delayed‐burst release. The encapsulation methodology is generalized to other active ingredients, oil phases, nanodroplet sizes, and chemically crosslinked inner hydrogel cores. Overall, the capsule systems provide promising platforms for various functional nanoemulsion formulations.https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202001677capsulescontrolled releasecore–shell hydrogelsliphophilic active ingredientsnanoemulsions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liang‐Hsun Chen
Li‐Chiun Cheng
Patrick S. Doyle
spellingShingle Liang‐Hsun Chen
Li‐Chiun Cheng
Patrick S. Doyle
Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
Advanced Science
capsules
controlled release
core–shell hydrogels
liphophilic active ingredients
nanoemulsions
author_facet Liang‐Hsun Chen
Li‐Chiun Cheng
Patrick S. Doyle
author_sort Liang‐Hsun Chen
title Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
title_short Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
title_full Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
title_fullStr Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
title_full_unstemmed Nanoemulsion‐Loaded Capsules for Controlled Delivery of Lipophilic Active Ingredients
title_sort nanoemulsion‐loaded capsules for controlled delivery of lipophilic active ingredients
publisher Wiley
series Advanced Science
issn 2198-3844
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Nanoemulsions have become ideal candidates for loading hydrophobic active ingredients and enhancing their bioavailability in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetic industries. However, the lack of versatile carrier platforms for nanoemulsions hinders advanced control over their release behavior. In this work, a method is developed to encapsulate nanoemulsions in alginate capsules for the controlled delivery of lipophilic active ingredients. Functional nanoemulsions loaded with active ingredients and calcium ions are first prepared, followed by encapsulation inside alginate shells. The intrinsically high viscosity of the nanoemulsions ensures the formation of spherical capsules and high encapsulation efficiency during the synthesis. Moreover, a facile approach is developed to measure the nanoemulsion release profile from capsules through UV–vis measurement without an additional extraction step. A quantitative analysis of the release profiles shows that the capsule systems possess a tunable, delayed‐burst release. The encapsulation methodology is generalized to other active ingredients, oil phases, nanodroplet sizes, and chemically crosslinked inner hydrogel cores. Overall, the capsule systems provide promising platforms for various functional nanoemulsion formulations.
topic capsules
controlled release
core–shell hydrogels
liphophilic active ingredients
nanoemulsions
url https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202001677
work_keys_str_mv AT lianghsunchen nanoemulsionloadedcapsulesforcontrolleddeliveryoflipophilicactiveingredients
AT lichiuncheng nanoemulsionloadedcapsulesforcontrolleddeliveryoflipophilicactiveingredients
AT patricksdoyle nanoemulsionloadedcapsulesforcontrolleddeliveryoflipophilicactiveingredients
_version_ 1724542612114767872