2 resultados para Project 2002-022-A : Value in Project Delivery Systems: Facilitating a Change in Culture

em Repositório Digital da UNIVERSIDADE DA MADEIRA - Portugal


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One of the main goals in Nanomedicine is to create innovative drug delivery systems (DDS) capable of delivering drugs into a specific location with high efficiency. In the development of DDS, some essential properties are desired, such as biocompatibility and biodegradability. Furthermore, an ideal DDS should be able to deliver a drug in a controlled manner and minimize its side effects. These two objectives are still a challenge for researchers all around the world. Nanogels are an excellent vehicle to use in drug delivery and several other applications due to their biocompatibility. They are polymer-based networks, chemically or physically crosslinked, with at least 80-90% water in their composition. Their properties can be tuned, like the nanogel size, multifunctionality and degradability. Nanogels are capable of carrying in their interior bioactive molecules and deliver them into cells. The main objective of this project was to produce nanogels for the delivery of anticancer drugs with the ability of responding to existent stimuli inside cells (cellresponsiveness nanogels) and/or of controlled drug delivery. The nanogels were mainly based on alginate (AG), a natural biopolymer, and prepared using emulsion approaches. After their synthesis, they were used to encapsulate doxorubicin (Dox) which was chosen as a model drug. In the first part of the experimental work, disulfide-linked AG nanogels were prepared and, as expected, were redox-sensitive to a reducing environment like the intracellular medium. In the second part, AG nanogels crosslinked with both calcium ions and cationic poly(amidoamine) dendrimers were developed with improved sustained drug delivery. The prepared nanogels were characterized in terms of size, chemical composition, morphology, and drug delivery behavior (under redox/pH stimuli). The in vitro cytotoxicity of the nanogels was also tested against CAL-72 cells (an osteosarcoma cell line).

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Tissue engineering is an important branch of regenerative medicine that uses cells, materials (scaffolds), and suitable biochemical and physicochemical factors to improve or replace specific biological functions. In particular, the control of cell behavior (namely, of cell adhesion, proliferation and differentiation) is a key aspect for the design of successful therapeutical approaches. In this study, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) fiber mats were prepared using the electrospinning technology (the fiber diameters were in the micrometer range). Furthermore, the electrospun fiber mats thus formed were functionalized using the layer-by- layer (LbL) technique with chitosan and alginate (natural and biodegradable polyelectrolytes having opposite charges) as a mean for the immobilization of pDNA/dendrimer complexes. The polyelectrolyte multilayer deposition was confirmed by fluorescence spectroscopy using fluorescent-labeled polyelectrolytes. The electrospun fiber mats coated with chitosan and alginate were successfully loaded with complexes of pDNA and poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers (generation 5) and were able of releasing them in a controlled manner along time. In addition, these mats supported the adhesion and proliferation of NIH 3T3 cells and of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) in their surface. Transfection experiments using a pDNA encoding for luciferase showed the ability of the electrospun fiber mats to efficiently serve as gene delivery systems. When a pDNA encoding for bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) was used, the osteoblastic differentiation of hMSCs cultured on the surface of the mats was promoted. Taken together, the results revealed that merging the electrospinning technique with the LbL technique, can be a suitable methodology for the creation of biological active matrices for bone tissue engineering.