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The emergence of drug delivery using water stable metal-organic frameworks has elicited a lot of interest in their biocompatibility. However, few studies have been conducted on their stability in common buffers, cell media, and blood proteins. For these studies, single crystal ZIF-8 approximately 1 um in diameter were synthesized, incubated with common laboratory buffers, cell media, and serum, and then characterized by PXRD, IR, DLS, and SEM. Time-resolved SEM and PXRD demonstrate that buffers containing phosphate and bicarbonate alter the appearance and composition of ZIF-8; however, cargo inside the ZIF-8 does not appear to leak out, in most of these buffers, even when the ZIF-8 itself is displaced by phosphates. On the other hand, blood proteins in serum dissolve ZIF-8, causing trapped biomolecules to escape. The study presented here suggests that ZIF-8 can undergo dramatic surface chemistry changes that may affect the interpretation of cellular uptake and cargo release data. On the other hand, it provides a rational explanation as to how ZIF-8 neatly dissolves in vivo.
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Michael A. Luzuriaga
Boston Medical Center
Candace Benjamin
Jacksonville University
M. Gaertner
Osnabrück University
Supramolecular chemistry
The University of Texas at Dallas
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Luzuriaga et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69da6bcba6045d71bfa3caf9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10610278.2019.1616089
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