FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for preparing a flowing silica composition
with or without a functional agent incorporated into the material. The present invention
also relates to a flowing silica composition, which can be produced with the method.
Furthermore, the present invention relates to a method for regelation of the flowing
silica composition. The present invention also relates to protection by encapsulation,
to preserve and deliver functional agents in and/or from flowing silica compositions.
The present invention further relates to uses of flowing silica compositions.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Silica is a versatile material and it can also be prepared synthetically in many
morphologies and it may contain different amounts of water. Silica is also soluble
in water and especially the sol-gel derived amorphous silica in more or less porous
form can be adjusted to have various dissolution rates in water and water-based solutions
(from hours to several months by low temperature processing, ≤ 40 °C), even at body
fluid pH (e.g. in body-fluid mimicking solutions), where the solubility of silica
is at minimum. One of the most interesting features of silica is its interaction with
many living organisms and biomolecules. Certain crystal forms of silica are harmful,
as in the case of silicosis, but in amorphous and water-dissolved form silica has
been observed to have positive interaction with living organisms and biomolecules.
Silica is also quite common in nature and a so called biosilification is often observed,
especially in many plants. In addition, one of the most abundant living creatures
on earth, diatoms, use a wet synthesis method to prepare a silica "skeleton" to cover
its organic part. Diatoms induce synthesis of amorphous silica by extracting the needed
soluble silica, silicic acid, from sea water that nucleates and condensates on diatoms.
[0003] One of the most studied methods to prepare silica is the sol-gel method. Both the
sol-gel process and the resulting silica structure resemble silica structures and
processes forming and occurring in nature, both in the biosilicification processes
and in geological processes, e.g. formation of opals or silica films forming on rocks.
The sol-gel process is done in liquid phase, which makes it potential for many applications,
e.g. encapsulation of different functional agents. Sol-gel derived SiO
2 and other SiO
2-based materials are commonly prepared from alkoxides, alkylalkoxides, aminoalkoxides
or inorganic silicates that via hydrolysis form partly hydrolysed silica species and/or
fully hydrolysed form, silicic acid. Consequent condensation reactions of SiOH containing
species lead to formation of larger silica species with increasing amount of siloxane
bonds. These silica species oligomerize/polymerise and small particles are formed,
turning the reaction solution to a sol. The process can be further controlled either
to result in particulate sols, i.e., colloidal silica dispersions, i.e., as syntheses
are done in alkaline pH & relatively great amounts of water & alcohol, the colloidal
particles grow in size & number and do not aggregate or aggregate only in some extent
and the formulation stays in the form of a sol. Acidic silica sols are commonly used
to prepare gels that are formed as small nanoscale particles aggregate in solution,
aggregates grow in size, collide and finally form a gel. In acidic sols, the pH can
also be increased to 5-7 to accelerate condensation after hydrolysis and desired sol
aging, which is also common in encapsulation, i.e., due to addition of sensitive additives,
e.g. proteins and viruses into a sol. The pH increase may also be accompanied with
the addition of extra liquids, like water and alcohols to control the gel formation,
e.g. to avoid too fast gel formation. Gels can also be formed from alkaline sols,
e.g. by adding salt and/or additional sol and/or other solvents into the sol and/or
by pH changes. Reactions (typically at ≤ 40°C) are commonly catalysed or the reactions
are steered to desired directions in one or several steps either by mineral acids
(e.g. HCl and HNO
3), other acids (e.g, CH
3COOH) or bases (e.g. NaOH or NH
3). The formed gel is then aged (typically at ≤ 40°C), dried (aging and drying often
simultaneously) to different water content (typically at ≤ 40 °C) and/or heat-treated
(typically at ≤ 700°C) to desired form resulting typically in amorphous and porous
SiO
2. The last step, heat treatment at elevated temperatures (50-700°C) is typically skipped
if the system contains functional agents that do not tolerate elevated temperature,
such as many biologically active agents. The gels that are dried at moderate temperature
(typically at ≤ 40°C) are generally called xerogels (<Gr. xero=dry), but in spite
of their name, they often contain more or less water. The silica gels containing substantial
amounts of water, e.g. 30-95 %, are sometimes called silica hydrogels, but the solid,
gel-like structure is still dominating the physical appearance.
[0004] Amorphous silica made by the sol-gel method is known to result in nanoscale porous
structure with varying amount of hydroxyl groups on surface. Amorphous sol-gel derived
silica has been observed to have specific interaction with living organisms and many
biomolecules. It is known to be biocompatible, (e.g. acceptable response observed
in tissue) and known to dissolve in the living tissue as well as in solutions simulating
the inorganic part of real human body fluid, e.g. in a water solution buffered to
pH 7.4 at 37°C with or without inorganic salts found in real body fluids. Consequently,
sol-gel derived silica and other amorphous silica-based materials are also used as
such in biomaterials applications and tissue engineering. Due to possibility for easy
encapsulation of different molecules and other active or functional agents by adding
them into the reacting sol in liquid phase, silica has also been used as drug delivery
device for traditional small-molecule drugs and different biologically and therapeutically
active agents, such as proteins and viral vectors. Due to typical porous structure,
it is also possible to absorb molecules into a ready-made silica structure.
[0005] Encapsulation can also be utilized in many other applications. Many proteins and
enzymes are useful in (bio)catalysis or in diagnostic applications as sensors (e.g.
antibody-antigen) and they can be encapsulated in sol-gel derived silica, which acts
as a carrier material. Also living cells, bacteria and algae can be encapsulated in
silica, where they may act as (bio)reactors, e.g. by producing therapeutic proteins
or other useful molecules or functional agents, e.g. dyes. Encapsulation and delivery
of viruses as viral vector, as well as RNA and DNA are also potential, e.g. in gene
therapy. Hence, studies on preservation of the biological activity of proteins and
other active agents in silica have been one of the topics of interest in different
fields of science. In addition to sensitive agents in different biotechnology-related
applications, it is also possible to encapsulate other active molecules, which are
usually easier cases with respect to preservation of their activity and functionality,
such as antimicrobial agents, fragrances, perfumes, colours & dyes, food colours,
food additives, fertilisers, antioxidants, humidifiers, vitamins, explosives, insecticides,
herbicides, fungicides and high-price reagents/precursors for chemical reactions.
[0006] Molecules and other active agents encapsulated in sol-gel silica are in direct contact
with different silica species from the liquid phase to solid-phase dominating gel,
where the condensation and pore structure are under continuous development. Quite
substantial shrinkage may occur during the aging and drying processes and also chemical
reactions, such as condensation, proceed. These processes may also proceed during
the storage, which may have crucial effects on the activity of the encapsulated agents.
This shrinkage occurs already in the preparation of silica hydrogels and xerogels
and it is naturally stronger as additional heat-treatment at higher temperatures is
conducted. This has been one of the challenges of the conventional sol-gel derived
silica that is used in encapsulation. Separate protecting agents, like sugars, have
been used to protect proteins from deactivation, but the protection is commonly weak
and partial, because the extensive shrinkage of the structure is still occurring.
[0007] Silica prepared by sol-gel method is conventionally processed to three-dimensional
structures by casting (e.g. monolithic rods), spinning (fibers), by dipping/draining/spinning
(coatings) or by preparing particles of different size. Particles are commonly prepared
either by spray-drying that result in particles or spheres mostly on micrometer scale
or by letting the particles grow in size and number in the sol in alkaline conditions,
which results in colloidal silica dispersion, i.e., submicron, nanoscale particles
in a solution. The liquids in the colloidal dispersion can be evaporated and the formed
powder of colloidal particles is typically washed and dried several times. Particles
are sometimes prepared also by grinding, e.g. monoliths to desired size. All the conventional
sol-gel processing methods involve a step, where the structure is dried and/or heat-treated
to some extent and the amount of solutions/solvents like water and alcohols are more
or less diminishing.
[0008] In prior art, the sol-gel derived silica-based materials are widely studied and used
as delivery matrix in different morphologies, such as monoliths, coatings and films,
fibres, particles of different size and for different functional agents. The functional
agents are often drugs and other therapeutic agents (such as proteins, viral vectors
and cells), but also other biologically active agents, such as cosmetic agents. Also
other functional agents, such as dyes or agents that produce dyes have been encapsulated
and optionally delivered. Sol-gel derived silica is not always used for delivery,
but for encapsulation only, e.g. as a support material for different functional agents,
e.g. for enzymes and other proteins that are used in biocatalysis and for sensor applications.
[0009] However, in all these cases, the produced silica is processed to a solid, three-dimensional
form, e.g. to "glasses, "xerogels", "hydrogels", "gel oxides" or "ceramics" that are,
e.g. in the form of monoliths, coatings, films, fibres or particles. In other words,
the processing includes always at least the formation of xerogel or a hydrogel meaning
that after the gel formation, the materials is aged and/or dried to certain extent,
typically near room temperature and used in the resulting in three-dimensional form
that has some properties that are characteristic for solid materials. The encapsulation
of functional agents is commonly done in situ in a sol by mixing the functional agents
as long as the liquid phase is still dominating. For many sensitive agents, like proteins
and viral vectors, the temperatures have to be kept low, typically at 40°C or below.
Small-molecule drugs and other functional agents may tolerate higher temperatures.
It is also possible to absorb the functional agents into the ready-made silica, i.e.,
elevated temperatures can be used in silica processing prior to absorption. Some of
the materials prepared and described in prior art may also be used in injection (such
as microparticles or powders ground from monoliths), but the preparation includes
always more or less extensive aging and/or drying of silica structure, where the resulting
solid, three-dimensional form of silica is used and the material is not injectable
as such and/or the encapsulation of functional agents does not occur (stable colloidal
silica dispersions prepared in alkaline sols).
[0010] WO96/03117 by Ducheyne et al. discloses controlled release carriers, where biologically active molecules are incorporated
within the matrix of a silica-based glass. Here, silica-based glasses are typically
multicomponent glasses, and 100 % SiO
2 is a special case, with a very poor dissolution. The release of the biologically
active molecules from the carrier is claimed to occur primarily by diffusion through
the pore structure.
[0011] WO 97/45367 and
WO 01/13924 by Ahola et al. disclose sol-gel derived silica xerogels for controlled release. In
WO 97/45367 the preparation of dissolvable oxides (silica xerogels) is carried out by simultaneous
gelation and evaporation and results in monolithic xerogels, small particles made
by spray-drying or fibres made by drawing. In
WO 01/13924 the sol-gel derived formulations vary from silica xerogel to alkyl-substituted silica
xerogels that provide controlled and sustained release for encapsulated biologically
active agents.
[0012] WO 93/04196 by Zink et al. discloses the idea of encapsulating enzymes in a porous transparent glass, prepared
with a sol-gel method. The purpose is to immobilize enzymes in the pore structure
and thus, the release of the enzymes is to be avoided. These porous, transparent glasses
can be used to prepare sensors for qualitatively and quantitatively detecting both
organic and inorganic compounds, which react with the entrapped material.
[0014] WO 2005/082781 by Jokinen et al disclose methods for adjustment of the biodegradation rate of silica xerogel monoliths,
microparticles and coatings/thin films based on methods where the original chemical
structure silica and connected biodegradation rate obtained by proper precursor ratios
can be preserved in spite of induced changes (e.g. forced drying in spray-drying,
water addition) prior to gel formation. The resulting silica structures undergo aging
and drying resulting in solid, three-dimensional forms of silica, which are used in
encapsulation and delivery of biologically active agents.
[0015] WO 02/080977 by Koskinen et al. discloses a method for preparation of a biodegradable silica xerogel comprising infecting
and/or transfecting viruses.
[0016] EP 0680753 by Böttcher et al. discloses different solid composites of metal oxide matrices (among them sol-gel
derived silica) and functional agents that have been encapsulated into the matrix
and are released from the matrix. The control of the release is related to use of
separate controlling and penetration agents in the matrix and the preparation of metal
oxides undergoes drying of the matrix prior to use.
[0017] WO 2003/034979 and
WO 01/80823 by Lapidot et al. disclose microcapsules with a core-shell structure, where the shell is made of sol-gel
derived oxides, among them silica, which are used for encapsulation and/or topical
delivery of active ingredients. The sol-gel-based preparation results in the formation
of solid microcapsules prior to use or further processing.
[0018] EP 0336014 by Lovrecich discloses pharmaceutical compositions with controlled release in which the active
substance is incorporated. The matrix composite are different oxides, among them silica.
The functional agents are absorbed into a ready-made, solid silica powder and the
main application is to enhance the drug solubility due to restricted crystallization
due to encapsulation in the nanoscale pores.
[0020] GB 2 103 202 A discloses fabrication of sintered high-silica glasses.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0021] An object of the present invention is to provide a method for producing a flowing
silica composition.
[0022] Another object of the present invention is to provide a flowing silica composition.
[0023] A further object of the present invention is to provide a silica gel.
[0024] A still further object of the present invention is to provide uses of a flowing silica
composition
- for the manufacture of a flowing silica gel preparation for administering of a silica
composition as such and/or incorporated functional agent,
- for preservation of a functional agent,
- for controlled release of a functional agent, and
- for administering a functional agent or agents for agricultural applications, applications
of food production, applications of forestry, pest control and/or environmental applications.
[0025] Thus the present invention provides a method according to claim 1.
[0026] The present invention also provides a flowing silica composition obtainable by the
method of the invention.
[0027] The present invention additionally provides a silica gel obtainable by methods of
the invention.
[0028] The present invention also provides use of a flowing silica composition, according
to the claims 15, 16 and 17.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029]
Figure 1 illustrates the main features of conventional sol-gel processing and the
present invention.
Figure 2 illustrates the use of sols and solutions as such.
Figure 3 illustrates preservation of the biological activity.
Figure 4 illustrates the differences of the products between the present invention
and those prepared by the conventional sol-gel processing.
Figure 5 illustrates silica dissolution rates for redispersed flowing silica compositions.
Figure 6 show silica dissolution rates for regelled silica compositions.
Figures 7, 8 and 9 illustrate oscillation measurements for silica compositions before
and after the gel point, redispersion and regelation.
Figures 10 shows dynamic viscosities for sols after mixing the precursors.
Figure 11 shows dynamic viscosities for flowing silica compositions after redispersion.
Figure 12 illustrates rheological responses of conventional sol-gel derived materials.
Figure 13 shows a Comparison between the rheological responses between silica composition
redispersed before the gel point (sols) and after the gel point (gels).
Figure 14 illustrates the release rates horse radish peroxidise (HRP) encapsulated
in silica compositions according to the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Terms
[0030] Gel should be understood to be a homogeneous mixture of at least one solid phase and
one liquid phase, i.e., a colloidal dispersion, where solid phase(s), e.g. silica
as such and/or as partly or fully hydrolysed, is the continuous phase and the liquid(s),
e.g. water, ethanol and residuals of silica precursors, is homogeneously dispersed
in the structure. The gel is viscoelastic and the elastic properties dominate, which
is indicated by rheological measurements under small angle oscillatory shear that
the elastic modulus, G' is at least 10 times greater than the viscous modulus, G"
(G' > 10 x G").
[0031] The
sol should be understood to be a homogeneous mixture of at least one liquid phase and
one solid phase, i.e., a colloidal dispersion, where the liquid phase(s), e.g. water,
ethanol and residuals of silica precursors, is the continuous phase and the solid
phase(s), e.g. colloidal particles of silica and/or as partly or fully hydrolysed
silica and/or aggregates of said particles are homogeneously dispersed in the said
liquid phase characterized in that the sol has clear flow properties and the liquid
phase is dominating.
[0032] The term
sol-gel transfer refers to a process where a sol turns to a gel. The most typical example on a preparation
process comprising a sol-gel transfer is as silica and other corresponding materials,
such as TiO
2 and ZrO
2 are synthesised from liquid phase precursors, typically alkoxides, alkylalkoxides,
aminoalkoxides and inorganic precursors, such as silicate solutions that form after
hydrolysis and condensation first particles, which turns the system to a sol, after
which the particles aggregate and/or grow in size and the sol turns to a gel either
spontaneously (typically in acidic sols) or by induced changes, such as pH change
or salt addition (typically in alkaline sols). In the said example on alkoxides and
silicate solutions, the sol-gel transfer occurs as a part of the above described longer
process, which is often called a
sol-gel process. The term
sol-gel process is also commonly used for the preparation of powder of colloidal particles, where
the alkaline sols does not actually form a gel, but the liquids in the sol are evaporated
resulting in the powder. However, the sol-gel transfer may also occur for ready-made
silica powders or other ceramic powders, such as oxide powders, e.g. TiO
2, ZrO
2, Al
2O
3. The powders may have been prepared by any method; also mined powders can be used
as such or as modified (e.g. as ground and washed). The sol-gel transfer for the ready-made
powders is possible especially for powders that consist of colloidal particles (diameter
ca. 5 micrometers or below), i.e., as a colloidal powder is mixed with a liquid, e.g.
water it can form a stable suspension, i.e., a sol and it can be further flocculated/coagulated
to a gel, e.g. by adjusting pH and/or adding salt and/or other substances that affect
the stability, such as other liquids or an additional silica sol.
[0033] The term
sol-gel derived silica refers to silica prepared by the sol-gel process wherein the silica is prepared from
liquid phase precursors, such as alkoxides, alkylalkoxides, aminoalkoxides or inorganic
silicate solutions, which by hydrolysis and condensation reactions form a sol that
turns to a gel or forms a stable sol. The liquids in the stable silica sol can be
evaporated, which results in the formation of a powder consisting typically of colloidal
silica particles. The resulting gels/particles can be optionally aged, dried and heat-treated
and if heat-treated, preferably below 700 °C. The sol-gel derived silica prepared
below 700 °C is commonly amorphous. The sols can be let to gel in a mould for form-giving.
The sol-gel derived silica can also be prepared by processing to different morphologies
by simultaneous gelling, aging, drying and formgiving, e.g. by spray-drying to microparticles,
by dip/drain/spin-coating to films, by extrusion to monolithic structures or by spinning
to fibres.
[0034] Gel point shall be understood to mean the time point when the sol that is flowing turns to
a gel that is viscoelastic and the elastic properties dominate, which is indicated
by rheological measurements under small angle oscillatory shear that the elastic modulus,
G' is at least 10 times greater than the viscous modulus, G" (G' > 10 x G"). The viscoelastic
properties are commonly measured with a rheometer (a measuring device for determination
of the correlation between deformation, shear stress and time) by the oscillatory
shear, where shear stresses are small (small angles of deformation). The total resistance
in small oscillatory shear is described by the complex modulus (G*). The complex modulus
contains two components: 1) elastic modulus, also called storage modulus, G' that
describes that material has some elastic properties that are characteristic for a
solid material, i.e., the gel system will gain energy from the oscillatory motion
as long as the motion does not disrupt the gel structure. This energy is stored in
the sample and is described by elastic modulus; 2) viscous modulus, also called loss
modulus, G" that describes flow properties, i.e., a system, e.g. a silica sol that
will in an oscillatory shear create motion between the ingredients of the sol describing
the part of the energy, which is lost as viscous dissipation. As G*=G' a material
is called elastic and as G*=G" a material is called viscous. At or near the gel point,
the elastic modulus, G' becomes larger than the viscous modulus, G". As G' > G", a
viscoelastic material is called semi-solid and correspondingly as G" > G, a viscoelastic
material is called semi-liquid. The gel point does not necessarily match exactly with
the point where G'=G", because a sol with very high viscosity may have elastic properties
although it is still flowing. Hence, the gel point should here be understood to be
the silica composition where the elastic modulus becomes at least ten times greater
than the viscous modulus during the steep increase of the rheological response occurring
typically near the gel point, G' > 10 x G". The magnitude of the elastic and viscous
modulus depends on the shear stress, which depends on the applied strain (small angle
deformation) and frequency (of the oscillatory shear). The measurements are conducted
by ensuring an adequate signal for a specific measuring system, i.e., a strain sweep
is commonly done at constant frequencies to find the proper signal for the rheometer
system and then the actual measurements are done at constant strain with varying frequency.
The varying frequencies give varying elastic and viscous modulus, but if the signal
for the rheometer system (commonly expressed as 0-100 %) is on proper level (above
1 %) for all chosen frequencies and the total shear stress does not disrupt the material
(is observed, e.g. if the elastic modulus starts to decrease although higher frequencies
are applied), the difference between the elastic and viscous modulus remains and the
measurement show whether the solid or liquid phase dominates. It is also typical that
the elastic modulus increases fast after the gel point if the surrounding conditions
are not significantly changed, e.g. 100-700 fold increase in G' within few minutes
after the gel point is typical for gels formed from acidic sols near room temperature,
e.g. for a R15 sol at pH=2 that turns to a gel (R=water-to-alkoxide molar ratio).
In the form of a gel after the defined gel point, the solid state dominates, but the
system still contains varying amounts of liquids and the material is typically soft
and viscoelastic before drying, and hard and brittle if it is extensively dried. In
the form of a sol, the liquid state dominates, but the system contains varying amounts
of solid phase(s) and the system is still flowing. Before the gel point it is typical
that a steep increase in dynamic viscosity and elastic modulus is observed, which
continues to rise after the gel point as the structure is developing.
[0035] Induced gelling, regelling and
gel formation refers to the sol-gel transfer that is not spontaneous or that is occurring due to/in
connection with a form-giving process. The spontaneous gel formation occurs typically
in acidic, e.g. alkoxide- or inorganic silicate solution-based sols. However, in alkaline
sols or in sols made from separate powders (consisting of colloidal particles) by
adding the powder into a liquid, the gelation does not occur without a separate factor
that induces gel formation. The factor may be e.g. addition of salt and/or pH adjustment
and/or another sol and/or another liquid and/or temperature change and/or change in
pressure (e.g. elevation of the temperature or decrease in pressure resulting in a
sudden release of volatile components (e.g. water, alcohol, and/or volatile acid or
base)) and/or separately introduced energy (e.g. electromagnetic or acoustic),. The
sol-gel transfer may also occur simultaneously with a form-giving process in which
sols are used, such as spray-drying to microparticles, extrusion to monolithic structures,
dip/drain/spin-coating to films, spinning to fibres, freeze-drying to monolithic structures
or casting in mould combined with simultaneous applying of any of the inducing factors.
[0036] The term
flowing silica compositions refers to materials that are prepared from a newly-formed gel by redispersing the
gel by adding extra liquid under stirring and the said compositions are flowing. The
flowing silica compositions are prepared from a gel. It is preferable that the redispersion is done right after
the sol-gel transfer in order to avoid the development of the structure (condensation
reactions proceed, structure shrinks and the material becomes more and more solid,
which is commonly indicated, e.g. by steep increase in the elastic modulus after the
sol-gel transfer and the gel point). In the case of sols made from separate powders
consisting of colloidal particles, the structure does not develop as fast as it will
do if, e.g. if alkoxides or inorganic silicate solutions are used in the typical sol-gel
process, but also in that case it is preferable to do the redispersion right after
the sol-gel transfer to avoid possible changes in flocculated/coagulated gel structure
as a function of time.
[0037] Controlled release refers to desired release rate in delivery of functional agents from silica compositions.
Slow (sustained) release is a common goal in delivery of functional agents, e.g. in
medical and veterinary use, but also fast release may be beneficial, e.g. in applications,
where the main purpose is to protect encapsulated functional agents, e.g. during storage
and the immediate release is desired after the storage as the silica composition is
applied to use.
[0038] Rheologically homogeneous refers to flow properties of the flowing and injectable silica composition, which
can be injected through a needle, preferably at least through a thin 22G needle, as
such or by short (< 30 s) stirring so that the composition stays homogeneous through
the whole composition and does not separate to discrete phases. In the context of
this application injectable through a specified needle, whether it be a 22G, 23G,
24G, 25G, 26G, 27G, 28G, 29G or 30G needle, a greater G-value is more preferable,
refers to that in the conditions defined, i.e. at RT (ca. 25°C), as such or after
short (<30 s) stirring, a 400 µl aliquot of the sample can be injected with a 1,0
ml syringe (e.g. BD Plastipak™) using standard injection procedures, i.e. with one
steady pressing of the syringe plunger without the use of undue force and without
phase separation or blockage of the needles occurring during the injection. Short
< 30 s stirring is typically carried out with a vortex mixer. It should be noted that
for many preferred embodiments of the invention the silica composition is equally
injectable as such as with short < 30 s stirring and short stirring, e.g. as carried
out in the examples, has only been carried out in order to standardize procedures.
[0039] Shear Thinning in the context of this application is a rheological property of a composition. Whenever
the shear stress or shear rate of such a composition is altered, the composition will
gradually move towards its new equilibrium state and at lower share rates the shear
thinning composition is more viscous than newtonian fluid, and at higher shear rates
it is less viscous.
[0040] Functional agent in the context of this application refers to any agent that is desirable to encapsulate
and/or to be delivered. Functional agents can be antimicrobial agents, fragrances,
perfumes, colours & dyes, food colours, food additives, antioxidants, humidifiers,
vitamins, explosives, insecticides, herbicides, fungicides and high-price reagents/precursors
for chemical reactions or biologically active agents.
Biologically active agent in the context of this application refers to any organic or inorganic agent that
is biologically active, i.e. it induces a statistically significant biological response
in a living tissue, organ or organism. The biologically active agent can be a medicine,
peptide, protein, polysaccharide or a polynucleotide, e.g. DNA and RNA. It can be
a living or dead cell or tissue, bacteria, algae, a virus, a bacteriophage and a plasmid
or a part thereof. It can be an agent for treatment of diseases in therapeutic areas
like alimentary/metabolic, blood and clotting, cardiovascular, dermatological, genitourinary,
hormonal, immunological, infection, cancer, musculoskeletal, neurological, parasitic,
ophthalmic, respiratory and sensory. It can further be for treatment of diseases like
osteoporosis, epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, pain and cognitive dysfunction. It can
be an agent for the treatment of hormonal dysfunction diseases or hormonal treatment
e.g. for contraception, hormonal replacement therapy or treatment with steroidal hormones.
It can further be an agent such as an antibiotic or antiviral, anti-inflammatory,
neuroprotective, prophylactic vaccine, memory enhancer, analgesic (or analgesic combination),
immunosuppressant, antidiabetic or an antiviral. It can be an antiasthmatic, anticonvulsant,
antidepressant, antidiabetic, or antineoplastic. It can be an antipsychotic, antispasmodic,
anticholinergic, sympathomimetic, antiarrhythmic, antihypertensive, or diuretics.
It can be an agent for pain relief or sedation. It can also be a tranquilliser or
a drug for cognitive dysfunction. The agent can be in a free acid or base form, a
salt or a neutral compound. It can be a peptide, e.g. levodopa; a protein, e.g. a
growth factor; or an antibody. It can be a polynucleotide, a soluble ion or a salt.
[0041] Protecting agent or agents in the context of this application refer to a substance or substances that are useful
for protecting and/or enhancing the biological activity of a functional or biologically
active agent.
[0042] The term
dissolution rate refers to SiO
2 matrix resorption in TRIS (e.g. Trizma preset Crystals, Sigma) solution buffered
at pH 7.4 and 37°C that simulates conditions of body fluids. The TRIS solution is
from 0.005 M to 0.05 M. In practice the concentration of TRIS solution is varied according
to specific demands of the analysis of a biologically active agent since determination
of the release rate of the biologically active agent is typically carried out when
the dissolution rate of the matrix is determined. It is common that buffers interfere
with many analysis systems that include specific reagents that interact with the analysed
target molecule. Such interference is often connected to certain buffer concentration.
It should be noted that actual dissolution rates in
in vivo applications are much slower than those of
in vitro results due to that concentration gradients
in vivo differ from those
in vitro. Accordingly the time for total dissolution are many times longer, typically about
10 times longer, and this should be understood when considering
in vivo applications.
[0043] Determination of the dissolution rate is carried out as follows: The SiO
2 concentration in the TRIS is kept below 30 ppm (to ensure
in sink conditions; free dissolution of the SiO
2 matrix) during dissolution. The SiO
2 saturation level at pH 7.4 is about 130-150 ppm. When needed, a portion of the dissolution
medium is changed to a fresh TRIS buffer in order to keep the SiO
2 concentration below 30 ppm. The dissolution rate is measured from the linear phase
of the release curve that is typical after a typical initial deviation (slower or
faster phase of release than the linear main part of the release) and before a typical
slower phase of the release before the total 100 % SiO
2 dissolution. The linear phase of the release is typically longer than the deviating
phases in the beginning or in the end release. The linear phase of the release curve
(wt-% dissolved SiO
2/h) can be defined by making a linear regression analysis of the measured release
points (wt-% dissolved SiO
2/h). Points of a possible initial deviation phase (slower or faster phase of release
than the linear main part of the release) are excluded if the points decrease the
linear regression correlation factor (r
2) to be < 0.9. The linear phase of the release curve (wt-% dissolved SiO
2/h) can be defined by making a linear regression analysis of measured release points
(wt-% dissolved SiO
2/h) with a linear regression correlation factor ≥ 0.9. The total amount (100 wt-%)
of SiO
2 is calculated from the theoretical amount of SiO
2 that can be obtained from the sol composition according to the net reaction (e.g.
1 mol of used alkoxide, TEOS corresponds to 1 mol SiO
2).
[0044] The term
cell means any living or dead cell of any organism. Thus cells of e.g. any animal, such
as a mammal including a human, plant, bacteria and fungi are included.
[0045] Silica refers in the context of the present invention preferably to amorphous silica as
such, amorphous silica containing water, fully or partly hydrolysed amorphous silica
or silica in water-dissolved form, such as silicic acid.
[0046] R-values referred to in the application, especially in the examples, are defined
by the water-to-alkoxide molar ratio of the recipes. Flowing silica compositions are
typically expressed with 2 R-values, e.g., R5-400, where 5 is the initial molar ratio
that is used to form the gel and 400 correspond to the total molar water-to-alkoxide
ratio after addition of water during the redispersion. However when alcohols or other
liquids are comprised in the recipe the R-value is used to calculate the corresponding
volume of water and the same volume of alcohol or other liquid is added during redispersion.
Features of the invention
[0047] The present invention is illustrated by comparing its main features to the main features
of the conventional sol-gel derived materials. During the conventional sol-gel processing,
the silica structures are prepared by turning the sol to a gel or by forming a stable
sol. The gel formation may occur spontaneously as, e.g. in acidic silica sols or by
forcing and speeding up the process, e.g. by using the sol for fibre spinning, extrusion,
dip-coating or spray-drying, where aging and drying occur simultaneously with the
gel formation and form-giving. Stable sols are typically formed in alkaline silica
sols so that the particles grow in size and number and are not aggregating or only
aggregating to some extent, but stay in the form of a sol. The stable sol may also
be forced to turn to a gel by adding, e.g. a salt, another sol, another solvent and/or
liquid, and/or by pH adjustment. However, the resulting gel structure is different
from that of gels prepared from acidic sols. Gels from alkaline sols contain larger
particles, they encapsulate additives weaker and they are mechanically weaker. In
acidic sols, salt or additional base can be used to further accelerate the otherwise
spontaneous process and, e.g. the increase of pH nearer to neutral condition e.g.
to pH 5-7 by adding a base is useful and often also compulsory especially when encapsulating
biologically active agents, such as proteins, viruses and cells, which are sensitive
to too low or high pH. Also changes in conditions through, e.g. evaporation, temperature
change, different forms of energy (electromagnetic, acoustic), addition of other liquids,
precipitation etc. can be used to accelerate the gel formation. The formed gel structures
are commonly let to age and dry, often simultaneously. Aging, drying and optional
heat-treatment result in shrinkage until there is a balance with the surrounding conditions.
Shrinkage easily destroys the biological activity of encapsulated agents, especially
in the case of larger ones, like proteins, RNA, DNA, viruses, algae, bacteria and
cells. Colloidal silica sols can be used as such or the liquids are evaporated and
after several washing steps and the resulting powder can be remixed, e.g. into water.
Optionally, a separate heat-treatment can be done on any morphology, if the encapsulated
agents tolerate the temperatures used, but temperatures of 0-40 °C are most common
in encapsulation of biologically active agents. The resulting structures can be used
as implantable or injectable devices. However, in order to use the conventional materials
in injection, additional mixing of the ready-made silica with a liquid can be done.
[0048] In the present invention, the sol has turned to a gel and the gel is redispersed
in a liquid, e.g. water, under stirring soon after the gel formation. The resulting
silica gel composition is flowing and injectable and encapsulated agents, such as
viruses and proteins retain their biological activity at least for months. The formation
of the gel ensures that any functional agent, e.g. a biologically active agent that
has been added into to the sol prior to gel formation, becomes effectively encapsulated.
The corresponding process for sols, i.e. the dilution of the sols, is also applicable
in order to make the sols more stable for injection (to retard gel formation), but
the encapsulation effect will not be optimal, not even for sols (consisting of relatively
large aggregates) near the gel point, because the added functional agents still have
notable possibilities to move in the sol. It is also possible to use ready-made silica
powder (or other ceramic powders, such as oxide powders, e.g. TiO
2, ZrO
2, Al
2O
3 etc.) to form a gel by mixing the powder with a liquid, e.g. water and by adjusting,
e.g. the pH. This is possible especially for powders that consist of colloidal particles
(diameter ca. 5 micrometers or below), e.g. by mixing a colloidal powder with e.g.
water to form a stable suspension, i.e. a sol, which can further be flocculated/coagulated
to a gel, e.g. by adjusting pH, and/or adding salt and/or other substances that affect
the stability, such as other liquids. After gel formation, re-dispersing of the gel
by adding liquid under stirring can be done in a similar way as is done for the gels
formed, e.g. by hydrolysis and condensation of alkoxides followed by aggregation of
formed particles. Some encapsulation of added functional agents can also be achieved
by gelling the ready-made powders by adding the functional agents prior to flocculation/coagulation
into the sol. It is also possible to add functional agents when re-dispersing, but
also in that case the encapsulation is not optimal. After gel formation, i.e., the
gel point, i.e. during aging and/or drying of the gel, the structure develosp further,
e.g. the material becomes more elastic, it hardens, shrinks etc. and the characteristics
of a solid material develop. Due to this structural development during aging and drying,
redispersing into a liquid, e.g. water, under stirring becomes more difficult with
time and it is preferable to do it right after the gel formation in order to prepare
a flowing silica gel composition that can be injected through thin needles in a syringe,
e.g. through a so called 26G needle, i.e. a needle with the gauge diameter of 0.45
mm. Depending on conditions, e.g. low temperature, e.g. near 0 °C, and/or "extreme
formulations" of silica (e.g. low water-to-precursor ratios that result in high solid
contents in the sol) the time point for redispersing after gel point may be relatively
long, e.g. several hours or even longer, because the structural development may be
slow. However, typical temperatures for preparation of these compositions, e.g. when
biologically active agents are used, are from 0 to 40 °C, because both deactivating
ice formation and elevated temperatures are to be avoided, especially sensitive agents
like proteins, DNA, RNA, viruses, bacteria, algae and cells are incorporated. The
main features of conventional sol-gel processing and the present invention are illustrated
in Figure 1.
[0049] Figure 1 demonstrates principles of conventional sol-gel processing compared with
the present invention.
1: Particles are formed after hydrolysis and condensation of silica precursors;
2a: In acidic sols the particles form aggregates and reactions proceed spontaneously,
the rate being dependent on the precursor and acid concentrations;
2b: In alkaline sols the particles grow in size and number. Particles do not aggregate
or aggregate only to a minor extent and the sol remains stable, i.e. spontaneous gel
formation does not occur.
3a: Aggregates grow in size and number and the sol turns spontaneously to a gel (increase
of pH can be used to accelerate gel formation). A mould can be used to cast the sol
to desired three-dimensional gel structures, e.g. to rods that can be used as such
as implants.
3b: Colloidal and stable silica dispersion (prepared by any method, either directly
from an alkaline sol using e.g. alkoxides or inorganic silicates or a ready-made powder
mixed with a liquid) can be gelled by adding salt, another sol, another solvent and/or
by pH adjustment and also cast by using a mould.
3c: In conventional sol-gel processing, the gel is let to age and/or dry at moderate
temperatures to a xerogel (<Gr. xero=dry), which can be used as such as e.g. implants.
3d: In conventional sol-gel processing, the aged and/or dried gel structures can be
further heat-treated at elevated temperatures;
3e: Conventional sol-gel processing; the sol is spun to fibres with simultaneous drying,
additional heat-treatment being sometimes used;
3f: Conventional processing: the sol is spray-dried to microparticles and an additional
heat-treatment step is sometimes used.
3g: Conventional processing: the sol is used to coat a device, e.g. by dipping, spinning
or draining; an additional heat-treatment step is common.
4: Present invention (analogous also for other oxides, e.g. TiO
2 and ZrO
2): the newly-formed gel is re-dispersed (or, e.g. by analogy, dilution of a sol near
the gel point containing great amounts of large silica aggregates is re-dispersed)
right after gel formation by adding liquid, e.g. water, under stirring to a flowing
and injectable silica composition. Gel formation (or presence of great amounts of
large aggregates in the sol just before the gel formation) prior to redispersing ensures
that added functional agents have a possibility to stay encapsulate. The composition
stays flowing and injectable at least for several months;
5a: Optional for the present invention: The re-dispersed, flowing and injectable silica
composition can also be gelled by adding salt and/or an additional portion of another
sol with high solid content and/or by adding another solvent and/or by changing the
pH or can gel due to an inherent property of the composition to a three-dimensional
monolithic form, e.g. in a mould or upon contact with the site of application. Regelling
can also be utilised to stimulate the formation of a three-dimensional structure right
after injection in tissue, which may be advantageous for controlled release, because
the gelled structure is denser than the flowing and injectable composition as such.
5b: Optional for the present invention: The redispersed flowing and injectable silica
composition can be further processed as such or by additional dilution by methods
including drying/evaporation of liquids and consequent forced gel formation, e.g.
for microparticle preparation by spray-drying, coating of implants by spinning, dipping,
draining and corresponding techniques, spinning to fibres or by extrusion to monolithic
structures, such as rods.
[0050] There are several theoretical possibilities to prepare flowing and injectable formulations
by conventional sol-gel processing, but they are not very good with respect to encapsulation,
protection and delivery of functional agents. Flowing and injectable formulations
can be prepared by conventional sol-gel processing either by dispersing ready-made
silica (e.g. spray-dried microparticles or particles ground from silica xerogel monoliths)
into a liquid, e.g. into water or into another pharmaceutically accepted liquid, like
glycerol or by using the sols or solutions as such and/or by diluting them to retard
gel formation. The use of sols and solutions as such is illustrated in Figure 2. The
disadvantage of the use of sols and solutions is weak encapsulation and/or dynamics
of the structure (turns to a gel). Encapsulation is weak from at least two viewpoints;
1) functional agents can move freely in the sol and only surface reactions and partial
encapsulation in larger aggregates is possible and 2) dilution of sols also means
that the relative amount of silica, the matrix that should encapsulate functional
agents, becomes lower.
[0051] In stable alkaline sols including colloidal silica particles and/or weakly aggregated
structures, encapsulation of added agents into the silica particle bulk is not practically
possible, especially for larger agents like proteins, RNA, DNA, viruses, bacteria,
algae and cells, which are of corresponding size or larger than the forming silica
particles. In addition, encapsulation of smaller molecules is unlikely and it would
disturb the reactions forming colloidal silica particles. The particles grow gradually
in size mainly by Ostwald ripening on the particle surface meaning that the same kind
of silica aggregates and networks are not present that are present in acidic sols.
[0052] Mixing of ready-made silica with liquids for injection has the same restrictions
as any silica xerogels or other silica glasses or ceramics, i.e. they undergo heavy
structural development and shrinkage of the structure during the process. For example,
in a spray-drying process, added functional agents can be added into sol and they
become encapsulated in resulting microparticles during spray-drying. These particles
can be mixed into liquid, e.g. water, and injected through thin needles, but the biologically
active agents are easily deactivated at the elevated temperatures and/or due to heavy
shrinkage of the silica structure (deactivating especially sensitive agents like proteins,
bacteria, algae, viruses and cells) during drying.
[0053] Figure 2 illustrates possible flowing and injectable formulations by conventional
methods compared with the present invention. 1: Silica in solution in molecular form,
e.g. as silicic acid and/or partly-hydrolysed silica precursors, and/or in oligomerized
form (no particles); encapsulation of molecules only theoretical or very weak and
partial. The silica species react in practice immediately into particles and accordingly
the molecular form is not a real option if alkoxides or corresponding precursors are
used. Rapidly forming small nanoscale particles turn the solution into a sol. The
molecular form can, however, be formed by dissolving amorphous silica in water, which
dissolves into silicic acid;
2: A sol of colloidal silica particles; encapsulation of molecules only theoretical
or very weak and partial, mostly surface reactions possible. The acidic sol prepared,
e.g. from alkoxides and inorganic silicates, is also dynamic, i.e. it turns to a gel,
which is not flowing and injectable. The dynamics can be reduced by diluting the sol
according to same principle as in redispersing. An alkaline sol prepared, e.g. from
alkoxides or other sols of colloidal particles, stays in particulate form, but encapsulation
is not likely, only surface reactions if functional agents react with SiOH;
3: A sol, where silica particles have formed aggregates; some encapsulation of molecules
possible, though very weak and partial. Larger aggregates are formed in acidic sols
that are dynamic and turn to a gel, which is not flowing and injectable. The dynamics
can be reduced by diluting the sol according to same principle as in the redispersing.
Large-scale aggregation does not occur in alkaline sols and in spite of some aggregation
the sols stay stable without gel formation, if no additives are used. Encapsulation
is not likely, only surface reactions if functional agents react with SiOH;
4: Gel point: Silica sol has just turned to a gel; functional agents present in the
sol become encapsulated as the gel is formed. 5: Silica gel is re-dispersed to flowing
and injectable form with a liquid, e.g. H
2O under stirring; functional agents added into a sol stay encapsulated in solid-dominated
nanoscale structures formed at the gel point and preserve their biological activity
at least for months.
[0054] The present invention also provides an option that can be useful in the preparation
of conventional silica morphologies, such as monoliths, fibres, particles or coatings/films,
especially if sensitive biologically active agents, such proteins, viruses, bacteria,
RNA, DNA, algae or cells are encapsulated in silica compositions. As already noted
in connection with Figure 1, the redispersed, flowing and injectable silica composition
can be used as such and/or by induced changes (e.g. dilution with liquids or additional
sols, salt additions, pH adjustments) for preparation of e.g. monoliths, fibres, particles
(and further use of particles, e.g. to prepare suspensions) or coatings/films. The
potential benefit, better preservation of the biological activity after form-giving,
is illustrated in Figure 3. Processing to three-dimensional forms by using the flowing
and injectable silica composition differs from conventional processing in that encapsulation
has already occurred before form-giving and the encapsulated agents are initially
better protected when processed.
[0055] Figure 3 shows a schematic comparison of three-dimensional silica structures prepared
from conventional sol and redispersed, flowing and injectable silica compositions.
1a: Form-giving processes in conventional silica sol-gel processing; the sol is processed
to monoliths by casting in a mould, spray-dried to particles, to coatings by dipping,
spinning, draining or any corresponding method or spun to fibres and the structure
shrinks/consolidates heavily during processing to a final form and functional agents
added into the sol become encapsulated between the particles. Shrinkage easily destroys
the biological activity of sensitive functional agents like proteins and viruses;
1b. An enlargement of an internal porous structure of silica structures (coatings, monoliths,
microparticles, fibres) prepared by a conventional method.
1c. An further enlargement of the internal porous structure of silica structures prepared
by conventional processing, where sensitive encapsulated and biologically active agents
easily loose their activity due to shrinking (due to aging, drying, water removal,
additional heat-treatment etc.) silica structure.
2. Present invention, an optional step, i.e. form-giving using the redispersed silica
compositions as a "precursor": the added functional agents are already encapsulated
before optional additional form-giving after redispersing (casting in moulds, spray-drying,
coating, spinning, extrusion etc.) which protects them during shrinkage (some kind
of consolidations and shrinkage occur in any form-giving method, also in casting,
although the drying that accelerates shrinkage/consolidation can be adjusted, prevented/retarded//accelerated,
and leaves more water into the structure that is also beneficial with respect to the
preservation of biological activity of sensitive agents like proteins and viruses.
2b. An enlargement of an internal porous structure of silica structures (coatings, monoliths,
microparticles, fibres) prepared from redispersed, flowing and injectable silica composition
2c. An further enlargement of an internal porous structure of silica structures prepared
from the redispersed, flowing and injectable silica composition, where sensitive encapsulated
and biologically active agents have better possibility to retain their activity in
spite of processing, where shrinking (due to aging, drying, water removal, additional
heat-treatment etc.) of silica structure occurs.
[0056] The present invention can also be compared with conventional sol-gel processing by
rheological measurements. The dynamic viscosity and low-shear oscillation measurements
conducted with a rheometer are useful in describing the differences of the products
between the present invention and those prepared by the conventional sol-gel processing.
These differences are illustrated in Figure 4. Figure 4 shows a schematic picture
of the rheological responses of method of the present invention and that of a conventional
sol-gel process.
Curve 1: A typical rheological response (dynamic viscosity, elastic modulus) of a silica
sol prepared in acidic conditions (process can be accelerated by increasing pH), with
a steep increase in dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus as the number and size of aggregates
of silica species starts to approach the gel point and the dynamic viscosity/elastic
modulus keeps on increasing after the gel point. Corresponding increase is observed
also in alkaline sols as they are gelled by adding salt, another sol, another solvent,
and/or by adjusting the pH;
Curve 2: Present invention, where the gel point is indicated with a black dot;
Curve 3: Typical rheological response (dynamic viscosity, elastic modulus) of a stable silica
sol prepared in alkaline conditions without additives inducing gel formation.
Phase A: Slow increase of the rheological responses (dynamic viscosity, elastic modulus)
in sols after mixing of precursors and before spontaneous (acidic sols) or induced
(pH increase, salt addition etc.) increase of dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus;
Phase B: Steep increase of rheological responses (dynamic viscosity, elastic modulus) near
the gel point that occurs spontaneously for sols prepared in acidic conditions (can
be also accelerated by increasing pH, e.g. to a level that is suitable for many sensitive
biologically active agents, i.e. a pH of 5-7);
Phase C: Gel point and short aging of the newly-formed gel, most preferably < 2 min during
which the dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus may increase) and re-dispersing of the
gel by adding liquid under stirring (during which dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus
decreases);
Phase D: Redispersed, flowing and injectable silica composition, which stays injectable at
least for several months. After redispersing, the dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus
is typically lower than at the gel point.
Phase E: Optional step, where the redispersed, flowing and injectable silica composition
may be gelled again by adding salt, another sol, another solvent and/or liquid, and/or
by pH adjustment for casting in a mould or after injection in tissue or by "forced
drying" (like spray-drying to microparticles, coating by spinning, dipping or draining
or by spinning to fibres). The dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus starts to increase
again, the gel is formed and the increase continues after the gel point;
The broken line ellipse (Phase D & E) describes schematically the time frame wherein the redispersed silica
formulation is flowing and injectable. The dynamic viscosity/elastic modulus may either
increase or decrease during the storage, but the formulations stay injectable at least
for several months. The silica composition stays injectable also for a short time
after addition of a salt, another sol, another solvent and/or liquid, and/or after
adjustment of pH.
[0057] The present invention differs structurally from the silica materials described in
prior art. In addition, the present invention introduces a new technical benefit that
is not possible with conventional techniques. These new silica formulations are simultaneously
flowing and injectable and capable of encapsulating functional agents, even the very
sensitive and large ones, like therapeutic proteins, viral vectors, cells, algae,
DNA and RNA. The injectable silica formulations provide possibilities to combine easy
use, minimal invasion (patient acceptance & conformity with thin needles), encapsulation,
and controlled delivery of functional agents. They can also be used as a protecting
formulation only, i.e. some formulations are able to encapsulate and protect the functional
agents, such as therapeutic drugs and other therapeutic and biologically active agents,
e.g. proteins, viruses, bacteria, cells, algae, RNA and DNA, against detrimental conditions,
but not necessarily provide a controlled release. The main difference of the present
invention compared with conventional sol-gel processing is that extensive structural
changes, e.g. shrinkage and evaporation of liquids conventionally occurring during
aging, evaporation, drying and heat-treatment phases are avoided. The silica formulations
of the present invention contain typically more than 95 % of liquids, water being
one of the most potential. During processing, high temperatures are not used (not
even instantaneously). The silica formulation of the present invention can be delivered
by injection through a thin needle and it encapsulates functional agents of any sizes,
from small molecule agent to very large scale agents, like cells and algae. The flowing
and injectable silica composition stays injectable for months. The flowing and injectable
silica composition is typically shear-thinning and for preferred compositions, the
rheological response, e.g. shear rate dependent dynamic viscosity remains almost constant
at particular shear rates in spite of high shear stresses. This means that the structure
is not strongly affected by the shear (e.g. by injection).
[0058] The described redispersing process does not separate the added agents from silica,
because encapsulation occurs mostly within the nanoscale structure and re-dispersing
the gel by stirring is not able to separate the agents from the silica species. This
is demonstrated by the results on biological activity, e.g. viruses stay active for
several months, but loose their activity in corresponding conditions in a buffer solution
within few days or weeks.
[0059] The optional step of the method of the invention, the regelation by adding salt,
sol, another solvent and/or liquid, and/or pH adjustment is useful if one wants to
enhance controlled release properties of the formulations after injection. The regelated
silica compositions are structurally more stable after taking a three-dimensional
form and hypothetically also encapsulates better. It also provides a different biodegradation
rate that is typically at least partly dependent on the form and size of an object.
In the form of a freely flowing, injectable composition, degradation in body fluids
is faster and the ability to encapsulate a bit lower. Consequently, a regelated composition
provides slower biodegradation rate and thus also slower release for functional agents
that are release due to biodegradation, e.g. proteins, viruses, cells, algae and other
corresponding agents that are large compared to pores of silica gel formulations.
[0060] The flowing silica compositions can be used in many applications where injection
or spraying of functional agents is desirable. Injection of the silica composition
including a therapeutic agent by a syringe through a thin needle is most potential
in medical and veterinary use, but there are also other applications where injection
or spraying or corresponding methods of applying can be used, such as spreading of
neutralising agents, fertilisers, fodder, manure, insecticides, herbicides and fungicides,
which are used, e.g. for environmental purposes, agriculture and forestry.
[0061] The flowing silica composition can also be used in combination with reservoir devices
for drug delivery but also for other applications. In this context the term reservoir
device relates to any closed reservoir or analogous structure with restricted transfer
of substance, typically a functional agent, to its surrounding. Reservoir devices
for drug delivery have been reviewed by e.g.
Lisa Brannon-Peppas in Polymers in Controlled Drug Delivery, Medical Plastics and
Biomaterials, Nov 1997, p. 34. Flowing silica composition could be delivered, typically injected, into such a reservoir
wherein dissolution of the flowing silica composition would be determined by the conditions
within the reservoir and delivery from the reservoir would be determined by the interface
of the reservoir separating the reservoir and e.g. a specific tissue that is surrounding
it whereto the drug is initially delivered.
[0062] Flowing silica compositions and the optional regelled compositions may also be useful
in biocatalysis and in sensor applications where the silica compositions act as matrix
or support materials and the encapsulated agents, such as proteins like enzymes or
antibodies, act as active ingredients.
[0063] The use of flowing and injectable silica composition as a precursor for conventional
morphologies, such as monoliths, coatings, films, particles of different size and
fibres, provides a possibility to better preserve the activity of encapsulated, functional
agents.
Preferred embodiments
[0064] According to preferred embodiments of the method of the invention at least one functional
agent, preferably biologically active agent, other than the silica as such, is incorporated
into said flowing silica composition, by mixing, preferably before the gel point of
the sol-gel transfer.
[0065] According to especially preferred embodiments of the method of the invention the
flowing silica composition is and remains injectable as such or by stirring < 30 s
through a 24G, preferably through a 26G, more preferably a 28G and most preferably
a 30G needle.
[0066] According to many preferred embodiments of the method of the invention adding of
the liquid and mixing is carried out within ≤ 10 d, preferably within ≤ 1 d, more
preferably within ≤ 10 h, even more preferably within ≤ 3 h and most preferably within
≤ 1 h of reaching the gel point of the sol-gel transfer. According to further preferred
embodiments adding of the liquid and mixing is carried out within ≤ 20 min, preferably
within ≤ 10 min, more preferably within ≤ 5 min and most preferably within ≤ 2.5 min
of reaching the gel point of the sol-gel transfer. Preferred time windows within which
adding of the liquid and mixing is to be carried out are recipe dependent and especially
temperature dependent. The lower the temperature is, the wider the time window. In
general, aging (structural development) of the gel slows down at low temperature and
accelerates at higher temperatures. Thus time windows from 1 h to 10 d or even longer
are typically feasible using low temperatures in the range of -70 °C to +10 °C , preferably
- 20 °C to +5 °C and time windows from 2.5 min, or even less, to 1 h are typically
feasible using higher temperatures in the range of +10 °C to +90 °C, preferably +15
°C to +35 °C, more preferably +20 °C to +30 °C and most preferably at RT, i.e. about
+25 °C.
[0067] Preferred embodiments of the method of the invention comprise the steps of
- a) preparing a sol from at least one liquid, preferably water and/or alcohol, and
from silica precursors, preferably alkoxides or inorganic silicate solutions, by hydrolysis
and condensation of said silica precursors with subsequent particle formation;
- b) optionally adding a functional agent, preferably a biologically active agent, or
agents, with or without one or more protective agents for said functional agent or
agents;
- c) letting a sol-gel process reach the gel point; and
- d) adding, after having reached gel point of said sol-gel transfer, liquid, preferably
water and/or alcohol, into the gel formed by said sol-gel transfer, and said adding
being made within a sufficiently short time period after reaching said gel point,
said time period depending on temperature and the recipe of the sol-gel transfer,
to result, after mixing to follow of said gel and said liquid, in a rheologically
homogenous said flowing silica composition, which is and remains injectable as such,
or by short stirring < 30 s, through a thin 22G needle.
[0068] In further preferred embodiments in step a) the sol is prepared from water, an alkoxide
or inorganic silicate solution and optionally a lower alcohol, i.e. an alcohol with
≤ 4 carbons, using an acid or a base as a catalyst, preferably a mineral acid.
[0069] In some preferred embodiments of the method said flowing silica composition stored
appropriately remains injectable for at least 1 week, preferably 1 month, more preferably
1 year and most preferably 5 years, and said storing preferably comprising storing
at ≤+37 °C, more preferably at ≤+25 °C, even more preferably at ≤+15 °C and most preferably
at ≤+5 °C.
[0070] In many preferred embodiments of the methods of the invention regelling of the flowing
silica composition is induced after redispersion. Regelling can be induced in many
ways. These include all the alternatives already discussed above for gelling. In some
cases it may be beneficial that the same induction methods result in precipitation
after injection (in precipitation a phase separation of a silica composition, total
or partial, may occur, in (re)gelling the system stays homogeneously in one phase).
In some preferred embodiments regelling is induced by adding an agent inducing regelling,
preferably selected from the group consisting of a salt, a sol, and a liquid. In other
preferred embodiments regelling is induced by adjusting pH. In still further preferred
embodiments regelling is carried out by dip, spin, or drain coating; freeze drying;
spray drying; fibre spinning; or casting. In these embodiments the flowing silica
composition can be a component of a mixture to be (re)gelled. In this context the
term "mixture" refers to any mixture comprising a flowing silica composition according
to the invention provided that other components of the mixture do not hinder gelling
of the mixture. Another silica sol is a particularly preferred other component of
the mixture. Depending on the particular application this can result in improved control
of dissolution rate of the silica composition as such and/or release of the functional
agent optionally incorporated in the composition. When a functional agent is incorporated
in the composition also loading, i.e. how much of the functional agent can be successfully
incorporated in a defined amount of the composition can be improved.
[0071] The invention also relates to embodiments in which regelling after redispersion is
followed by further redispersion of the regelled gel. In some particular embodiments
it can be advantageous to have several cycles of redispersion and regelling in sequence.
Further cycles can, depending on the application, enhance the improvements referred
to above.
[0072] Preferred flowing silica composition of the invention have at least one functional
agent, preferably a biologically active agent, other than the silica gel itself, incorporated
into said flowing silica composition, by mixing, preferably before the gel point of
the sol-gel transfer.
[0073] Especially preferred flowing silica compositions are shear thinning.
[0074] In preferred uses for the manufacture of a flowing silica gel for administering to
humans or animals especially preferred embodiments have at least one functional agent,
preferably biologically active agent, other than the silica as such, is incorporated
into said silica composition by mixing, preferably before the gel point of the sol-gel
transfer. In further preferred embodiments said use comprises administering selected
from the group consisting of oral, buccal, rectal, parenteral, pulmonary, nasal, ocular,
intrauterine, vaginal, urethral, topical, dermal, transdermal and surgically implantable
administering. In some preferred embodiments the use comprises administering by injection.
In still further preferred embodiments regelling of the flowing silica composition
is induced in combination with the injecting of the flowing silica composition resulting
in regelling of the flowing silica composition following the injection. Preferably
induction of regelling is carried out prior to injecting the flowing silica composition.
EXAMPLES
[0075] All silica compositions referred to in the examples to follow not defined to have
been prepared from a particular precursor have peen prepared using TEOS (tetraethyl
orthosilicate).
Example 1
Preparation of re-dispersed (RD) flowing and re-gelated (RG) silica compositions
[0076] The silica compositions were prepared using TEOS (= tetraethyl orthosilicate; component
A) as the precursor for silica. The initial R= H
2O/TEOS (molar ratio) was varied from R2 to R52.5 and calculated, initial pH in every
sample was pH 2 (HNO
3 was used to adjust the pH). After mixing the precursor, the reactions were let to
occur at room temperature for 25 minutes prior to pH adjustment of the sol. Prior
to actual pH adjustment, all samples, except R52.5-200, were diluted with water to
R=H
2O/TEOS=52.5 in order avoid too fast gel formation. After dilution, the pH was raised
to 5.5-6.0 by adding 2 M NaOH with vigorous stirring for every sample. The sol turned
to a gel, after which the gel was re-dispersed with H
2O under stirring within 0-5 minutes after the gel formation, which changed the molar
ratio to R=H
2O/TEOS=200-400. The code for the compositions include the data accordingly, e.g. R52.5-200
means that the initial molar ratio H
2O/TEOS = 52.5 and after re-dispersing it is 200. If the composition is used as such
in the flowing form in different characterization methods, it is coded additionally
with "RD" (= re-dispersed), e.g. R52.5-200 RD and with "RG" (= re-gelled) if the re-dispersed
compositions are additionally re-gelled by adding salt and another sol, e.g. R52.5-200
RG. The regelation of the redispersed flowing silica compositions was done by adding
a salt solution [Simulated Body Fluid = body-fluid salts concentrations mimicking
(in double salt concentrations) water solution buffered to pH 7.2-7.4 at 37 °C] and
a R3 (pH=2) sol into a RD composition in the volume ratio of 1.00/0.75/8.25. The solid
contents of the compositions varied between 0.8-3.1 wt-%.
[0077] In addition, gels and redispersed silica compositions were prepared from alkaline
sols using molar ratios H
2O:TEOS:ethanol=26.7:13.3:60.0 with NH
3 as a catalysts NH
3:TEOS molar ratio being ca. 0.01 yielding to ca. pH=9. The sol was gelled by adding
a salt and/or by adjusting the pH to 7. The sol was gelled after 48 hours aging at
40 °C either by adding Ca(NO
3)
2 (to total concentration of 4 x 10
-4 M) or by adjusting the pH to 7. After additions/adjustments, the gels are formed
within ca. 20 hours. The redispersion of the formed gels were done by similar way
as in the case of the gels derived from the acidic sols resulting in flowing silica
composition.
[0078] Sodium silicate solution (SiO
2 · NaOH, Sigma-Aldrich) was also used as a precursor to prepare gels that were redispersed
to flowing form at room temperature. The contents of the sols are expressed with the
R-values (molar water-to-TEOS ratio) via calculation of the corresponding theoretical
SiO
2 content for the sodium silicate formulations. The accordingly calculated R-values
for sodium silicate formulations varied between R30-50. Redispersions were done in
water, which increased R-values to 200-400. Every studied sodium silicate formulation
was prepared by the same procedure: The initial pH was adjusted to < 1 with concentrated
HNO
3. After slow stirring at room temperature for 25 min, pH was raised to 5-6 by adding
2 M NaOH solution under vigorous stirring. After pH adjustment the sols turned into
gels, after which the redispersion of formed gels were done right after the gel point
by similar way as in the case where TEOS was used as the precursors. The redispersion
of the sodium silicate-derived gels resulted in flowing and injectable silica formulations.
Example 2
Silica dissolution rates for redispersed flowing silica compositions
[0079] Re-dispersed flowing and injectable silica compositions were studied by immersing
them in 0.05 M TRIS buffer solution (pH 7.4, 37°C) for dissolution rate measurements
in sink conditions [C(SiO
2) < 30 ppm]. The dissolution studies were done in the shaking water bath. The Si concentration
of the TRIS buffer at different time points was measured with a spectrophotometer
(UV-1601, Shimadzu) analyzing the molybdenum blue complex absorbance at 820 nm. The
dissolution rates of the different re-dispersed flowing silica compositions (A= R52.5-200
RD, B= R15-300 RD and C=R5-400 RD) are presented in Figure 5 as cumulative dissolution
of SiO
2. The SiO
2 dissolution rates are calculated from the linear part of the graph under ca. 30 ppm
(3.32 ppm/h for R52.5-200 RD, 3.29 ppm/h for R15-300 RD and 4.62 ppm/h for R5-400
RD).
Example 3
Silica dissolution rates for regelled silica compositions
[0080] Redispersed flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R30-200 RD, R15-300 RD and
R5-400 RD) were stored for 6 months at room temperature (RT) and refrigerator temperature
(25°C and 4°C). Redispersed flowing silica compositions that were additionally regelled
(A=R52.5-200 RG, B=R30-200 RG, C=R15-300 RG and D=R5-400 RG) were studied after the
gel formation by immersing them in 0.05 M TRIS buffer (pH 7.4, 37 °C). The details
of the re-gelation are presented in Example 1. RG compositions are made from the corresponding
stored RD compositions after the given storage times. The dissolution studies were
done in the shaking water bath at 37 °C. The Si concentrations at different time points
were measured with a spectrophotometer (UV-1601, Shimatzu) analyzing the molybdenum
blue complex absorbance at 820 nm. The dissolution for 6 months stored compositions
is presented in Figure 6 as cumulative release of SiO
2. The SiO
2 dissolution rates are calculated from linear part of the graph under ca. 30 ppm.
The dissolution rates with different storage time at different storage temperatures
are presented in the list below as released SiO
2 per time unit (ppm/h). For all the regelled silica compositions, except R5-400 RG,
dissolution rates decreased during the 6 months storage at room temperature. For all
compositions at refrigerator temperature and for R5-400 RG also at room temperature
the dissolution rate first increased and then decreased during the 6 months' storage.
[0081] Dissolution rates for different formulations at different temperatures:
R52.5-200 RG
○ RT: 1.69 ppm/h (3 months); 1.21 ppm/h (6 months)
○ 4 °C: 2.04 ppm/h (3 months); 1.32 ppm/h (6 months)
R30-200 RG
○ RT: 1.73 ppm/h (0 months); 1.71 ppm/h (3 months); 1.61 ppm/h (5 months); 1.16 ppm/h
(6 months)
○ 4°C: 1.90 ppm/h (3 months); 1.90 ppm/h (5 months); 1,37 ppm/h (6 months)
R15-300 RG
○ RT: 1.22 ppm/h (0 months); 1.09 ppm/h (5 months); 1.07 ppm/h (6 months)
○ 4 °C: 1.32 ppm/h (5 months); 1.20 ppm/h (6 months)
R5-400 RG
○ RT: 1.77 ppm/h (0 months); 2.50 ppm/h (5 months); 1.80 ppm/h (6 months)
○ 4 °C: 2.65 ppm/h (5 months); 2.06 ppm/h (6 months)
Example 4
Oscillation measurements for 3 silica compositions before and after the gel point,
redispersion and regelation
[0082] The rheological measurements (done at room temperature in all examples), oscillatory
shear by small angle deformation were done for redispersed flowing and regelled silica
compositions (R52.5-200 RD & R52.5-200 RG, R15-300 RD & R15-300 RG and R5-400 RD &
R5-400 RG) at different phases of the preparation, after mixing the precursors, during
the steep increase in the rheological response near the gel point (including also
the gel point), right after redispersing, after 1 month's storage at room temperature
as redispersed and after addition of salts and another sols (that induce regelation)
into the redispersed composition after 1 month's storage. The measurements were done
using Bohlin VOR rheometer and measuring system was a concentric, coaxial cylinder
sensor system (C 25) ("a bob and a cup" system). The elastic (storage) (G') and the
viscous (loss) (G") moduli were determined using oscillatory measuring technique with
a constant amplitude of 3 %. Before the gel point and redispersion, the used frequencies
were 0.1-2.0 Hz and the torsion element was 0.335 g cm. For measurements of the redispersed
flowing silica compositions before and after regelation, the frequency was 0.05-1.0
Hz and the torsion element was 1.94 g cm. The magnitude of the elastic (G') and viscous
moduli (G") depends both on the deformation and frequency, but the relative ratio
between G' and G" does not vary very much at the same time point. The elastic and
viscous moduli of the different RD and RG compositions at the frequency of 0.6 Hz
(represents the average) are presented in Figure 7 (R52.5-200 RD/RG), Figure 8 (R15-300
RD/RG) and Figure 9 (R5-400 RD/RG). The formed gels were redispersed as G' (indicated
with "A") was 10-15 times greater than G" (indicated with "B"). The typical G' values
for the studied compositions varied between 6-60 Pa at/near the gel point.
Example 5
Dynamic viscosity for R52.5, R 15 and R5 sols after mixing the precursors
[0083] Dynamic viscosity (Figure 10) was measured for
R52.5 sol (A), R15 sol (B) and R5 sol (C) by Bohlin VOR Rheometer with the concentric, coaxial cylinder sensor system (C 25)
("a bob and a cup" system). Dynamic viscosity was measured at shear rate 0.730 - 461
s
-1 (up and down) and the torsion element was 1.94-12.4 g cm.
Example 6
Dynamic viscosity for silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R 15-300 RD and R5-400 RD)
after redispersion
[0084] Dynamic viscosity (Figure 11) was measured for
R52.5-200 RD (A), R15-300 RD (B) and R5-400 RD (C) compositions by Bohlin VOR Rheometer with the concentric, coaxial cylinder sensor
system (C 25) ("a bob and a cup" system). Dynamic viscosity was measured at shear
rate 0.730 - 461 s
-1 (up and down) and the torsion element was 1.94-12.4 g cm. The redispersed, flowing
silica compositions show typical shear-thinning behaviour, which is favourable for,
e.g. injection. The flowing silica compositions remained shear-thinning after 1 months
storage (not shown) and the curve was almost identical both up and down (shear rates).
The corresponding results from oscillatory shear are presented in Figures 11, 12 and
13 at the points indicated by RD and RG that shows the situation after storage showing
some change as a function of storage time.
Example 7
Rheological responses of conventional sol-gel derived materials
[0085] The rheological measurements, oscillatory shear by small angle deformation (Figure
12) was measured for conventional sol-gel process for composition R15 (pH 2; process
was accelerated after 60 minutes by increasing pH to 5.8 by adding 2 M NaOH) by Bohlin
VOR Rheometer with the concentric, coaxial cylinder sensor system (C 25) ("a bob and
a cup" system). The used frequencies were 0.1-2.0 Hz and the torsion element was 1.94
g cm and amplitude 3 %. The G' (A) and G" (B) are typical for conventional silica
gel preparation from an acidic sol. There is the steep increase before the gel point
during which G' becomes clearly dominating and it continues to increase fast after
the gel point. Another example on a conventional sol-gel process in alkaline sols
(described in example 1; the alkaline sols without induced gelation) was also characterised
with the same coaxial cylinder sensor system (C 25) ("a bob and a cup" system). As
expected, the oscillatory shear did not give any measurable signal (not shown) for
a stable sol consisting of colloidal silica particles. The viscosity measured (not
shown) was about 3-4 mPas depending on the shear rate, i.e., not much higher than
for water at corresponding conditions (1 mPas at room temperature).
Example 8
Comparison between the rheological responses between silica composition redispersed
before the gel point (sols) and after the gel point (gels)
[0086] Figure 13 illustrates the difference in the rheological response of the redispersed
flowing silica compositions (R5-400 RD ="D") and corresponding sols that are analogically
diluted (from R5 to 400 = "B" (first time point) and "C" (second time point) prior
to the gel point. In addition, the dynamic viscosity of the R5 sol (="A") after mixing
the precursors is also presented. The dynamic viscosity was measured at shear rates
of 11.6-461 s
-1 (with the same coaxial cylinder sensor system, C 25; "a bob and a cup" system). Dynamic
viscosity of R5 sol (A) was 3-6 times higher than the viscosity of the diluted sol
(B), which was diluted right after NaOH addition, i.e., it represents a composition,
which do not contain larger silica aggregates and the rheological response is still
relatively low, even without the dilution. Dynamic viscosity of the redispersed flowing
silica composition (R5-400 RD="D"; prepared from the gel right after the gel point
within 2 minutes) was 25-50 times higher than dynamic viscosity of the corresponding
diluted sol (C) (dilution done short time (some minutes) before the gel point). The
dynamic viscosity results show that there is a clear difference between the rheological
response between the flowing silica composition prepared by redispersion of the gel
and the silica composition prepared by dilution of the corresponding sol.
Example 9
Protein encapsulation in flowing silica compositions
[0087] A protein (β-galactosidase) was encapsulated into redispersed flowing silica compositions
(R52.5-200 RD, R30-200 RD, R25-200 RD, R20-200 RD, R15-200 RD, R10-200 RD, R5-200
RD, R2-200 RD, R15-300 RD and R5-400 RD). Addition of proteins (10 µg/ml silica composition)
was done into the sols (R52.5, R30, R25, R20 R15, R10, R5 and R2) after pH adjustment
to pH 5.5-6.0 and prior to the gel point. The redispersion was done within 2 minutes
after the gel point and the redispersed flowing silica compositions were stained to
study the proteins activity as a function of encapsulation time. Encapsulated β-galactosidase
was detected from redispersed flowing silica compositions and compared with the corresponding
plain redispersed flowing silica compositions (controls) by X-Gal staining method.
Each redispersed flowing silica composition was injected through 26G needle (BD Microlance™
3, 0.45 mm x 16 mm) onto the bottom of 24 well plates well. On the top of the sample,
the staining solution (2 mg/ml X-Gal (Eppendorf, 0032006.400, stock 50 mg/ml in N,N-dimethylformamide,
Sigma D4551), 0.002 mM MgCl
2 (Sigma, 3143), 0.005 mM K
3Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën, 31253) and 0.005 mM K
4Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën) in PBS was added, enough to cover the protein composite. Plate was
incubated at 37 °C for 16 hours. After incubation redispersed flowing silica compositions
with active β-galactosidase stained blue and the control silica compositions stayed
yellow. β-galactosidase remains active at least up to 14 months in the redispersed
flowing silica compositions when using TEOS as the precursor.
[0088] β-galactosidase was also encapsulated into redispersed flowing silica compositions
(R52.5-200 RD, R15-300 RD and R5-400 RD) that were re-gelled according to the method
described in example 1 to study the release and encapsulation of the protein from
the regelled silica compositions. The regelled silica compositions (R52.5-200 RG,
R15-300 RG and R5-400 RG) were immersed in 0.05 M TRIS buffer solution (pH 7.4, 37
°C). The dissolution study was done in the shaking water bath at 37 °C. After two
weeks immersion the protein encapsulated RG silica composites were stained with X-Gal
method. On the top of the sample the staining solution (2 mg/ml X-Gal (Eppendorf,
0032006.400, stock 50 mg/ml in N,N-dimethylformamide, Sigma D4551), 0.002 mM MgCl
2 (Sigma, 3143), 0.005 mM K
3Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën, 31253) and 0.005 mM K
4Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën) in PBS was added, enough to cover the protein composite. Test tubes
were incubated at 37 °C for 16 hours. After incubation the R52.5-200 RG, R15-300 RG
and R5-400 RG silica compositions were stained and they turned blue showing that there
was still active β-galactosidase inside the composite after two weeks dissolution.
It shows that β-galactosidase is not significantly diffusing out from the regelled
silica compositions.
[0089] Two other proteins, horse radish peroxidase (HRP, Sigma-Aldrich) and Lactide dehydrogenase
(LDH, Sigma-Aldrich), were encapsulated into redispersed flowing silica compositions
(TEOS was used as the precursor) with two different protein concentrations (1% (w/w)
and 10 % (w/w) vs. weight of SiO
2). The redispersed flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R15-300 RD and R5-400
RD) with both proteins were stored at three different temperature (refrigerator temperature
(ca. 4°C), room temperature (ca. 25°C) and 37°C). The enzymatic activity of encapsulated
HRP was detected from redispersed flowing silica composition with a spectrophotometer
(ThermoLapsystem, Multiscan EX) analyzing the absorbance of yellow colour formed by
3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbentsidine (TMB, Sigma-Aldrich) at 405 nm. Each redispersed flowing
silica composition was injected onto bottom of 96-well plates well. On the top of
a sample, the TMB solution was added. Plates were incubated at room temperature for
30 min. After incubation the reaction was stopped by adding 0.5 M H
2SO
4. The redispersed flowing silica compositions with HRP were stained as such during
the first 5 months and they all showed 100 % activity compared to time point 0. Because
the absorbance measured after the reaction was so high, an additional dilution system
(1/100000 for flowing silica composition with 10% of HRP and 1/10000 for 1% of HRP))
was used after 5 months' storage. After 6 months' storage as the dilution system was
used, no significant decrease was observed in the enzymatic activity of HRP encapsulated
in the flowing silica compositions stored at 4°C and 25°C. However, for the flowing
silica compositions stored at 37°C, a decrease in HRP activity was observed. The results
are presented in the list below as percentage (w/w) of the remaining enzymatic activity
compared to the calculated theoretical amount of HRP added into the flowing silica
compositions. The enzymatic activity of HRP is well preserved at least for 9 months
in the flowing silica compositions stored at 4 °C and room temperature with both 1
% and 10 % of HRP. For the flowing silica compositions stored at 37 °C for 6-9 months,
decrease in the enzymatic activity was observed and the decrease was greater in the
compositions with 1 % of HRP.
[0090] Enzymatic activity of HRP encapsulated in flowing silica compositions as a function
of time at different storage temperatures:
R52.5-200 RD (10 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 31 % (172 days), 33% (234 days), 18 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 82 % (172 days), 86 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 93 % (234 days), 95 % (273 days)
R52.5-200 RD (1 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 7 % (234 days), 1 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 100 % (234 days), 83 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 100 % (234 days), 100 % (273 days)
R15-300 RD (10 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 69 % (172days), 78 % (234 days), 52 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 100 % (172 days), 100 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 94 % (234 days), 99 % (273 days)
R15-300 RD (1 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 14 % (234 days), 5 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 100 % (234 days), 100 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 90 % (234 days), 72 % (273 days)
R5-400 RD (10 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 91 % (172 days), 78% (234 days), 38 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 100 % (172 days), 100 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 100 % (234 days), 100 % (273days)
R5-400 RD (1 % of HRP)
○ 37°C: 19 % (234 days), 8 % (273 days)
○ Room temperature: 100 % (234 days), 72 % (273 days)
○ 4°C: 100 % (234 days), 100 % (273days)
[0091] HRP protein was also encapsulated in to redispersed flowing silica compositions (R30-400
RD, R40-400 RD and R50-400RD) which were prepared using sodium silicate (Sigma-Aldrich)
according to the method described in Example 1. The redispersed flowing silica compositions
with 10 % protein (w/w compared to m(SiO
2)) were stored at three different temperatures (4 °C, 25 °C and 37 °C). After 3 months'
storage the enzymatic activity of the encapsulated HRP was detected from redispersed
flowing silica composition with spectrophotometer (ThermoLapsystem, Multiscan EX)
analyzing the absorbance of yellow color formed by TMB (Sigma-Aldrich) at 405 nm.
The same dilution system was used as described above. The results are presented in
the list below as percentage (w/w) of the remaining enzymatic activity compared to
the calculated theoretical amount of HRP added into the flowing silica compositions.
R30-400 RD
○ 4°C: 27 % (w/w)
○ 25°C: 32 % (w/w)
○ 37°C: 24 % (w/w)
R40-400 RD
○ 4°C: 2 % (w/w)
○ 25°C: 5 % (w/w)
○ 37°C: 5 % (w/w)
R50-400 RD
○ 4°C: 72 % (w/w)
○ 25°C: 72 % (w/w)
○ 37°C: 17 % (w/w)
[0092] The enzymatic activity of encapsulated LDH was detected from redispersed flowing
silica composition (TEOS was used as the precursor) by spectrophotometer (ThermoLapsystem,
Multiscan EX) at 450 nm and 690 nm. Each studied redispersed flowing silica composition
with LDH was injected on to the bottom of 96-well plates well. On the top of sample
the staining solution (equivalent amounts of LDH substrate, LDH dye and LDH cofactor).
The plate was covered from light and incubated 30 min at room temperature. After incubation
the reaction was stopped by adding 1 M HCl. LDH remains active at least up to 7 months
with both LDH concentrations at the all studied temperatures (4 °C, room temperature,
37 °C).
[0093] The redispersed flowing silica compositions were also used as such in the preparation
of microparticles by spray-drying (with a mini spray dryer B-191, Büchi Labortechnik
AG, Switzerland; inlet temperature was 80°C, air flow 700 l/h, aspiration 95 %, pump
10 %, resulting microparticles collected into a vessel cooled with an ice bath, spray-nozzle
was cooled with running tap water at ca. 5-8°C) and compared with the corresponding
sols for preservation of biological activity of encapsulated β-galactosidase. It was
observed that some redispersed flowing silica compositions (R15-200 RD, R20-200 RD,
R20-400 RD; cyclodextrin was optionally used as a protecting agent and added into
the sols (R15, R20) prior to gel formation) preserved the activity of β-galactosidase
in resulting microparticles to some extent, which was characterised with the method
described above. Activity was observed both with and without the protecting agent.
Corresponding preservation of the activity was not observed for microparticles prepared
by conventional methods from silica sols in corresponding conditions and spray-drying
parameters.
Example 10
Virus activity in silica compositions
[0094] Activity of adenoviruses was studied in different silica compositions, in redispersed
flowing silica compositions in solution with molecular silica species (silicic acid)
and in a sol-gel derived silica sol.
[0095] Adenoviruses were encapsulated in redispersed flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200
RD, R30-200 RD, R20-200 RD, R15-200 RD, R5-200 RD, R52.5-300 RD, R30-300 RD, R20-300
RD, R15-300 RD, R5-300 RD, R30-400 RD, R20-400 RD, R15-400 RD and R5-400 RD). Addition
of viruses was done into the sols (R52.5, R30, R20 and R5) after pH adjustment to
pH 5.5-6.0 and prior to the gel point. The redispersion was done within 2 minutes
after the gel point and the redispersed flowing silica compositions were stained to
study the adenovirus activity (ability of the viruses to infect/transfect) as a function
of encapsulation time. Tests were carried out using 24-well plates (Costar). CRL-2592
(ATCC) cells were grown to nearly confluent state using DMEM (Sigma, D5648) supplemented
with iFCS 10 % (v/v), antibiotics and NaHCO
3 1.5 g/I at cell culture environment (+37°C, 5 % CO
2, humidified atmosphere). Just before the applications the medium was changed into
fresh medium (1 ml / well). 200 µl of flowing silica compositions and controls were
applied on cells through pipette tip and/or injection needle. There were two duplicates
for each sample. After applications, the plates were placed into cell culture environment
and cultured for 2-3 days, and then stained. Cells were stained with X-Gal method:
For staining the cells were washed two times with phosphate buffered (to 7.4) saline
(PBS 137 mM NaCl (Riedel de Haën 31434, 2.7 mM KCI Riedel de Haën 31248, 8.1 mM Na
2HPO
4 Riedel de Haën 30427, 1.5 mM KH
2PO
4 Riedel de Haën 30407). Then they were fixed with 0.25 % glutaraldehyde (25 % glutaraldehyde,
sigma (G6257) diluted with water for 5 minutes. Then the cells were again washed three
times with PBS and the staining solution (2 mg/ml X-Gal (Eppendorf, 0032006.400, stock
50 mg/ml in N,N-dimethylformamide, sigma D4551), 0.002 mM MgCl
2 (Sigma, 3143), 0.005 mM K
3Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën, 31253) and 0.005 mM K
4Fe(CN)
6 (Riedel de Haën) in PBS was added, enough to cover the cells, through 0.22 µm syringe
filter (Sartorius, 16532). Plates were placed back into cell culture environment o/n.
Next day the infected/transfected cells were detected by microscopy. This method shows
qualitatively that the viruses released from the flowing silica formulations are able
to infect the cells (at least some cells infected/well). The results are summarized
in table 1 in the column "Qualitative" by indicating the longest preservation time
for the virus activity as encapsulated in the flowing silica formulations. The results
show that the activity (ability to infect/transfect) of the adenoviruses is preserved
at room temperature in several flowing silica formulations for at least 5-6 months.
At 4 °C, there are several formulations, where the activity is preserved for 10-12
months.
[0096] Another method, so called TClD
50 method was used to determine quantitatively the preservation of adenovirus (AdlacZ216;
serotype 5; same viruses as in the qualitative test above) activity (infectivity)
in the flowing silica formulations. For the TClD
50 method, 293 cells (human embryo kidney cells, Microbix Biosystems) were cultured
on 96 well cell culture plates, 10 000 cells / well. DMEM with 2 % iFBS was used as
the growth medium. Samples were diluted in a logarithmic manner 0.1; 0.01; 0.001 etc.
dilutions. Cells on ten parallel wells were infected with 100 µl/well from the dilution
and from all the dilutions the number of infected wells was recorded after 10 days
of culture at +37 °C, 5 % CO
2, 95 % moisture. The titer, i.e., the number of infective viruses was calculated by
the Kärber (also called Spearmann-Kärber method) statistical method.
[0097] The direct results from the TClD
50 method are expressed as TClD
50/ml, which is 0.7 log higher than the titer expressed by the standard plaque assay
(plaque forming units = pfu/ml). The results are converted to pfu/ml (summarized in
table 1 in the column "Quantitative"; pfu/ml means pfu in 1 ml of the flowing silica
formulation and it is indicated in table 1 as "pfu/ml of silica"), because the original
virus stock solutions used in the encapsulation were received with data given in pfu.
These quantitative results verify that the virus infectivity is preserved in several
flowing silica formulations for at least 5-6 months at room temperature and the most
accurately studied formulation, R5-400 RD shows also clear infectivity preservation
for at least 11 months at 4 °C and for R52.5-200 RD and R30-400 RD even longer (470
and 419 days, respectively). The calculated initial virus amount was 3.2-3.3 x 10
8 pfu/ 1 ml of the flowing silica formulation in every formulation in the quantitative
study.
[0098] To show that the encapsulation in the flowing silica formulations has an effect on
the preservation of the infectivity, the adenovirus deactivation in the plain phosphate-buffered
saline was also studied with the same TClD
50 method. Virus titer was measured at the following time points (pfu/ml) at 2 different
temperatures. The ratio of the remaining infectivity is given in the parentheses:
37 °C:
○ 0 days: 1,20E+10 (100 %)
○ 3 days: 1,80E+08 (1.5 %)
○ 7 days: 2,00E+0 (0.17 %)
○ 14 days: 7,50E+05 (0.01 %)
○ 17 days: 3,80E+04 (0.00 %)
○ 32 days: 0.00E+00 (0.00 %)
Room temperature
○ 0 days: 1,20E+10 (100 %)
○ 17 days: 4,00E+08 (3.33 %)
○ 32 days: 7,90E+07 (0.66 %)
○ 52 days: 7,90E+06 (0.07 %)
[0099] The infectivity of the adenoviruses decreases quite fast in the plain phosphate-buffered
saline, which verifies that the encapsulation of the adenoviruses in the flowing silica
formulations has a clear effect on the preservation of the infectivity of the viruses.
[0100] The solution of molecular silica species, silicic acid was prepared by dissolving
a sol-gel derived silica gel (R52.5) in PBS buffer (details above) up to SiO
2 concentration of ca. 130 ppm. The molecular SiO
2 species containing PBS was compared with PBS with respect to the adenovirus activity
as function of time. Sample virus dilutions was made by adding 100 µl of adenovirus
stock (AdlacZ216, titer 2 x 10
10 pfu/ml) into 10 ml of PBS and another 100 µl into molecular SiO
2 species containing PBS. CRL-2592 (ATCC) were cultured at 96-well plates (Nunc, 167008)
(conditions and mediums same as above). Sample virus dilutions were kept at +37 °C.
At time points logarithmic dilution series was made from sample virus dilutions: 0)
100 µl of original dilution, 1) 10 µl of 0)-dilution + 90 µl of DMEM (same as above),
2) 10 µl of 1)-dilution + 90 µl of DMEM, and so on. Last dilution was 9). Medium was
removed from cells and these prepared dilutions were applied onto cells. 100 µl of
fresh DMEM was added and plates were incubated at cell culture environment for 2 days.
Then they were stained with above mentioned X-Gal method. After 20 days, the adenoviruses
were still active in 0)-, 1)- and 2)-dilutions for the molecular SiO
2 species containing PBS, but there was no significant difference between the molecular
SiO
2 species containing PBS and controls (fresh PBS with viruses and PBS with viruses
after 20 days).
[0101] A sol-gel derived silica sol (R300 pH 2 and prior to virus addition it was increased
to pH 6.6) was prepared to final volume of about 10.5 ml. The sol remained flowing
throughout the test period. Serotype 5 adenovirus, AdlacZ216 was added (200 µl) into
the sol and the final virus concentration was of about 10
7 pfu/ml. PBS buffer (pH 7.4; details above) solution (control) had the same virus
content. Both solutions were kept at cell culture environment and samples were cultured
at different time points. Culturing was carried out at 24-well plates (costar) using
human skin fibroblasts (HSF) established from punch biopsy obtained from a voluntary
healthy male donor (age 27), cultured in supplemented DMEM (details above). The sample
volume was 10 µl, except at the first time point (7 d) where 200 µl of PBS was used
causing larger infection/transfection. The amount of cell culture medium was 1 ml.
Infection/transfection was detected by X-Gal staining method (described above). The
sample application was carried out on the confluent cell monolayers, except the PBS-Adenovirus
control at 21 days and R300 with viruses at 12 days, where the samples (10 µl) were
applied together with the cell suspension, which enhances the infection with HSF cells.
Time points: PBS-adenovirus control: 7, 10, 15, 17, 21, 28, 34 days; R300 with viruses:
5, 7, 12, 19, 25, 33 days. By qualitative monitoring, the number of Infected/transfected
cells decreased as a function of time. After 28 days, there were single infected cells
for PBS-adenovirus control, but after 34 days no infection/transfection could
Table 1
| Formulation |
Qualitative |
Quantitative |
| |
RT |
4 °C |
37 °C pfu/ml of silica |
RT pfu/ml of silica |
4 °C pfu/ml of silica |
| R52.5-200 RD |
199 d |
363 d |
|
|
2.2 x 105 (470 d) |
| R30-200 RD |
90 d |
326 d |
|
|
|
| R20-200 RD |
151 d |
32 d |
|
1.4 x 105 (260 d) |
|
| R15-200 RD |
90 d |
92 d |
|
|
|
| R5-200 RD |
151 d |
|
|
4.5 x 105 (172 d) |
|
| R52.5-300 RD |
90 d |
363 d |
|
|
|
| R30-300 RD |
151 d |
129 d |
|
|
|
| R20-300 RD |
151 d |
197 d |
|
2 x 106 (179 d) |
|
| R15-300 RD |
151 d |
156 d |
1.3 x 105 (21d), |
|
|
| 9.9 x 103 (28 d), |
|
|
| 5.2 x 103 (31 d), |
2.1 x 106 (146 d), |
|
| 1.2 x 103 (35d), |
8.8 x 10 (179 d) |
|
| 4.1 x 102 (38 d), |
|
|
| 1 x 102 (68 d). |
|
|
| R5-300 RD |
151 d |
88 d |
|
1.9 x 106 (172 d) |
|
| R52.5-400 RD |
151 d |
|
|
1.4 x 105 (168 d) |
|
| R30-400 RD |
151 d |
314 d |
1.1 102 (31 d), |
8.9 x 104 (260 d) |
4.1 x 107 (419 d) |
| x 4.0 x 102 (67 d). |
| R20-400 UD |
151 d |
314 d |
|
1.1 x 105 (260 d) |
|
| R15-400 UD |
90 d |
156 d |
|
7 x 104 (179 d) |
|
| |
|
|
5.1 x 103 (21 d), |
|
|
| R5-400 UD |
151 d |
326 d |
1.1 x 103 (28 d), |
1.6 x 106 (172 d) |
2.8 x 107 (8 d), |
| |
|
|
3.2 x 102 (35 d) |
|
1.6 x 107 (335 d) |
| The calculated initial virus amount was 3.2-3.3 x 108 pfu/ 1 ml of the flowing silica formulation in every formulation in the quantitative
study. |
be observed. Corresponding results were achieved for R300 silica sols with viruses,
after 25 days only single infected/transfected cells could be found, and after 33
days no infections/transfections could be observed.
[0102] The virus activity results showed that the redispersed flowing silica compositions
preserved the activity of the encapsulated adenoviruses at least for 4 months, but
in solution with molecular silica species (silicic acid) and in a sol-gel derived
silica sol there was no significant difference between the silica composition and
the controls.
Example 11
Cell Response of the flowing silica compositions
[0103] The cell behaviour in contact with cells (CRL-2592 (ATCC)) was monitored in connection
with the virus activity tests. No chemical stress could be seen with microscopic examination
when testing redispersed flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R15-300 RD and
R5-400 RD). Cells grew well covering the whole surface of the plate. Some part of
cells could be detached, but this is probably caused by physical of silica species.
Cell size was similar as with the negative cell control and no increase in vacuolization
could be detected. Cell number was increased (qualitative, visual finding) meaning
that cell division was not inhibited. Cells looked normal in shape.
[0104] Influence of the redispersed flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R15-300 RD
and R5-400 RD) on the cell growth was compared to the cell growth in plain 24-well
cell culture plates (control) in same conditions. The redispersed flowing silica compositions
were placed onto nearly confluent cell layers (4 parallel samples for each silica
composition and for the control). No difference in the cell growth (done according
to the yellow tetrazolium MTT (3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium
bromide) protocol) was observed between the flowing silica compositions and the control.
[0105] RK13 cells (rabbit kidney cells, CCL-37) were encapsulated in the redispersed flowing
silica (R5-400 RD) and in the corresponding regelled silica (R5-400 RG). Addition
of RK13 cells (ca. 10
6 cells) was done into the R5 sol after pH adjustment to 5.5-6.0 and prior to the gel
point. Redispersion was done right after gel formation. The redispersed flowing silica
composition ( R5-400 RD, 400 µl) and the corresponding regelled composition (R5-400
RG, 400µl) was cultured in DMEM (Sigma, D5648) supplemented with iFCS 10 % (v/v),
antibiotics and NaHCO
3 1.5 g/I at cell culture environment (37 °C, 5 % CO
2, humidified atmosphere). R5-400 RD and R5-400 RG without the cells were studied as
controls. Both silica compositions were injected through 26G needle (BD, Microlance
™ 3, 0.45 mm x 16 mm) onto the bottom of 24 well plates well. On the top of the samples
culturing medium (1.0 ml) and staining solution (alamarBlue
™, 1/10 total volume) were added. Plate was incubated at cell culture environment (37
°C, 5 % CO
2, humidified atmosphere) for 24 hours. After incubation the colour absorbances were
measured by a spectrophotometer and the metabolic activity was calculated from the
measured results. 29 % of colour was changed (from blue (oxidized form) to red (reduced
form)) with R5-400 RD and 27 % with R5-400 RG indicating viability of the encapsulated
cells.
Example 12
Follow-up on the injectability of different redispersed flowing silica formulations
at different storage temperatures
[0106] 24 different redispersed (redispersions in water) flowing silica compositions (TEOS-derived)
were injected (á 400 µl) with the 1.0 ml syringe (BD Plastipak
™) with different sizes of needles. All the redispersed flowing silica compositions
were shortly (< 30 s) stirred vigorously before the filling of the syringe. All the
injections were conducted at room temperature. After storage in closed vessels at
room temperature (RT = ca. 25 °C) or at refrigerator temperature (ca. 4 °C) for at
least 9 months, most of the redispersed (redispersed right after the gel formation)
flowing silica compositions remained as injectable through the same syringe needles
as right after the redispersion (0 months). All the injections could be done according
to normal use of syringes with one, steady pressing of the syringe plunger and no
extra power was needed. All studied formulations, except R52.5-200RD and R30-200RD,
remained stable with respect to injectability through thin needles [25G or thinner
(external diameter 0.5 mm or thinner)] up to 9 months of storage at room and refrigerator
temperatures. After 9 months of storage, the best redispersed flowing silica compositions
could be injected through 30G needles (BD Microlance
™3; 0.3 mm x 13 mm).
[0107] Injectability is expressed in tables 2A, 2B and 2C by providing the thinnest needle
size (BD Microlance
™ 3) through which the injection (á 400 µl) was easy to conduct (one, steady pressing
of the syringe plunger with no extra power) with 1.0 ml syringe (BD Plastipak
™) and the formulations remained in one phase, i.e., no phase separation was observed
during and after the injection and no blockage of the needles occurred.
[0108] 27G and 30G needles were taken into regular follow-up after 7 months' storage. Before
that the thinnest needle used was 26G. Because many of the formulations can be injected
through the thinner needles (27G, 30G) after 8 and 9 months' storage, it is clear
that it has also been possible also within 0-7 months. One formulation was studied
separately with a new batch at 0 months (R5-400 RD) and it was observed that the formulation
could be injected through the 30G needle.
[0109] To compare injectability with different syringes, a short study with 2 different
syringes was conducted. When redispersed flowing silica composition (R15-400 RD stored
for 9 months at room temperature) was injected (1 ml) with a larger 10.0 ml syringe
(Terumo® syringe), injection (event itself) took longer and more power was needed
for the injection than for the injection of 400 µl with a 1.0 ml syringe (BD Plastipak
™). The needle is quite easily blocked up when using a 10.0 ml syringe and some withdrawal
of the syringe plunger is needed to empty the syringe totally, but with the 1 ml syringe
the injection (400 µl) can be done by one, steady pressing. However, no phase separation
was detected either with 10.0 ml or 1 ml syringe.
[0110] For re-gelling formulations (RG), before the actual gel formation, no practical difference
has been observed in the injectability compared with the redispersed (RD) formulations.
For R5-400 RG (redispersion done right after the gel point), the injectability remained
identical (30G) with the corresponding redispersed formulation (R5-400 RD) for 5 minutes
after addition of the salt solution and R3
Table 2A
| Formulation / Storage time |
0 month |
1 month |
2 months |
3 months |
| |
RT |
4 °C |
RT |
4°C |
RT |
4 °C |
RT |
4 °C |
| R52.5-200 RD |
|
|
|
|
25G |
26G |
23G |
25G |
| R30-200 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
| R25-200 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
| R20-200 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R15-200 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R10-200 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-200 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-200 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R52.5-300 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
| R30-300 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R25-300 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R20-300 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R15-300 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R10-300 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-300 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-300 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R52.5-400 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R30-400 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R25-400 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R20-400 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R15-400 RD |
26G |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R10-400 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-400 RD |
26-30G* |
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-400 RD |
|
|
|
|
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| *separate batch later for 30G |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sol. The same (injection with 30G) was observed for R5-400 RG made from R5-400 RD
that was stored for 5 and 9 months both at room temperature and at 4 °C. After the
actual gel formation, injectability did not worsen immediately. All of the studied
R5-400 RG formulations (stored for 0, 5 and 9 months both at room temperature and
at 4 °C) remained injectable through 30G needles at least for
Table 2B
| Formulation / Storage time |
4 months |
5 months |
6 months |
| |
RT |
4°C |
RT |
4°C |
RT |
4°C |
| R52.5-200 RD |
21 G |
25G |
23G |
25G |
23G |
23G |
| R30-200 RD |
23G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
25G |
25G |
| R25-200 RD |
23G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
| R20-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
25-26G |
26G |
| R15-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
25-26G |
26G |
| R10-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R52.5-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R30-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R25-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R20-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R15-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R10-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R52.5-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R30-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R25-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R20-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R15-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R10-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R5-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
| R2-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
26G |
10 minutes, after which the re-gelled structure started to clearly worsen injectability.
[0111] A follow-up study (same 1 ml syringe and same needles as for TEOS-derived formulations)
on 3 different sodium silicate-derived silica formulations (R30-200 RD, R40-200 RD,
R50-200 RD) was also conducted. At 0 months as well as after 3 months' storage at
room temperature and 4 °C, 26G was thinnest needle in use and all formulations could
be injected. At 5 months' storage at room temperature and 4 °C, R30-200 RD and R40-200
RD could be injected trough 30G needle, but R50-200 RD with 27G.
Needle sizes (BD Microlance
™ 3; external diameter x length):
21G (0.8 mm x 30 mm); 23G (0.6 mm x 30 mm); 25G (0.5 mm x 25 mm); 26G (0.45 mm x 16
mm); 27G (0.4 mm x 13 mm); 30G (0.3 mm x 13 mm)
Table 2C
| Formulation / Storage time |
7 months |
8 months |
9 months |
| |
RT |
4°C |
RT |
4°C |
RT |
4°C |
| R52.5-200 RD |
23G |
23G |
23G |
23G |
23G |
23G |
| R30-200 RD |
25G |
25-26G |
23G |
25G |
23G |
23G |
| R25-200 RD |
25-26G |
25-26G |
25G |
25G |
25G |
25G |
| R20-200 RD |
25-26G |
26G |
25G |
26G |
25G |
25G |
| R15-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
25G |
25-26G |
25G |
25G |
| R10-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26-27G |
26G |
26-27G |
25-26G |
| R5-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
26-27G |
26-27G |
26-30G |
25-27G |
| R2-200 RD |
26G |
26G |
27-30G |
26-30G |
26G |
26G |
| R52.5-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
27-30G |
27-30G |
26-30G |
27G |
| R30-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
27-30G |
26-27G |
26-27G |
| R25-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
27-30G |
30G |
27G |
| R20-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
27-30G |
30G |
30G |
| R15-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26-30G |
26-30G |
27-30G |
26-30G |
| R10-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
27-30G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
| R5-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
26-30G |
30G |
26-30G |
26-27G |
| R2-300 RD |
26G |
26G |
25-30G |
25-30G |
26-27G |
26G |
| R52.5-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
27-30G |
| R30-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
27-30G |
| R25-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
26-30G |
| R20-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
27-30G |
| R15-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
27-30G |
30G |
27-30G |
| R10-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
| R5-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
27-30G |
27-30g |
30G |
| R2-400 RD |
26G |
26G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
30G |
Example 13
Influence of aging time of gel before redispersion on injectability of redispersed
flowing silica formulations
[0112] Three different flowing silica formulations were studied for injectability (at room
temperature, ca. 25 °C) after different aging times of the gel before the redispersion.
A short mixing (≤ 30 s) with a vortex mixer was done every time before the filling
of the syringes. All the injection experiments were done using a 1 ml syringe (BD
Plastipak
™) and by injecting 400 µl. Under the aging, the gels were kept in closed, large test
tubes at room temperature (at ca. 25 °C). All the redispersions are made by adding
water and the mixing in the redispersion is conducted by using a vortex test tube
mixer. The injectability of the redispersed formulations is tested right after the
redispersion and after 1 week's storage in the closed test tube at room temperature
(at ca. 25 °C). The results show that the aging (at room temperature) time of the
gel after the gel point (= before the redispersion) should preferably be shorter than
5 minutes in order to achieve good injectability through thin needles like 27-30G
(BD Microlance
™ 3). For the flowing silica products that have been redispersed after a longer (≥
5 minutes) gel aging time, the redispersion was clearly harder and already a short,
one week's storage time worsened the injectability. For 2 of the formulations in this
example (R52.5-200 RD and R5-400 RD) redispersed right after the gel point, the good
injectability through thin needles is preserved at least for 9 months at different
temperatures, which is shown in more detail in the other example, example 12. The
accurate needle dimensions are also given in example 12.
Formulation 1: R15-200 RD
[0113] Redispersion 0 minutes after the gel point: Easy to redisperse, results in homogenous
dispersion, no visible particles or lumps, easy injection both with 27G and 30G. The
dispersion remains in one phase during and after the injection, no phase separation
can be observed. After one week's storage at room temperature as redispersed, the
injectability (27G and 30G) works as right after the redispersion.
Comparative example 13a
[0114] Redispersion 2.5 minutes after the gel point: A bit harder to redisperse than the
gel redispersed right after the gel point (0 minutes), contains gel-like lumps, but
they are and stay homogeneously distributed in the dispersion. The formed dispersion
is still easy to inject both with 27G and 30G. The dispersion remains in one phase
during and after the injection, no phase separation can be observed. After one week's
storage in the closed test tube at room temperature as redispersed, the injectability
(27G and 30G) works as right after the redispersion.
[0115] Redispersion 5 minutes after the gel point: Even harder to redisperse than the gel
redispersed 2.5 minutes after the gel point, contains larger gel-like lumps and the
lumps separate from liquid phase by falling onto the bottom. However, the injection
is still easy both with 27G and 30G after a short (10-30 s) mixing with a vortex mixer.
The dispersion remains in one phase during and after the injection, no phase separation
can be observed. After one week's storage in the closed test tube at room temperature
as redispersed, the injectability has already worsened; the thinnest needle for the
injection was 25G.
[0116] Redispersion 10 minutes after the gel point: Even harder to redisperse than the gel
redispersed 5 minutes after the gel point. The gel had to be separately broken into
larger pieces in order to be able to redisperse it in water using the vortex mixer.
The formed dispersion contained large gel particles, which fell quite fast onto the
bottom. The 1 ml syringe could not be filled directly, but a larger pipette was needed.
The thinnest needle that could be used for the injection was 19G. During and after
the injection phase separation was observed. After one week's storage in the closed
test tube at room temperature as redispersed, no differences were observed in the
injectability.
[0117] Redispersion 60 minutes after the gel point: Hard to redisperse, comparable to that
observed for the gel redispersed 10 minutes after the gel point. The gel had to be
separately broken into larger pieces in order to be able to redisperse it in water
using the vortex mixer. Mixing during the redispersion could not break the largest
particles, which fell fast on the bottom of the test tube. The 1 ml syringe could
not be filled directly, but a pipette with a larger diameter was needed. The thinnest
needle that could be used for the injection was 19G. During and after the injection
phase separation was observed. First came the liquid phase, after which partly dried
gel particles. After one week's storage in the closed test tube at room temperature
as redispersed, no differences were observed in the injectability.
[0118] Redispersion 24 hours after the gel point: Identical observations for the redispersion,
injection and for the behaviour after one week's storage as for the formulation redispersed
60 minutes after the gel point.
[0119] The longest time for the other formulations studied, R52.5-200 RD and R5-400 RD,
for the gel aging time before the redispersion was 10 minutes, because within that
time the injectability is already clearly worsened.
[0120] The observations made at the same conditions and at the same time points (0 minutes,
2.5 minutes, 5 minutes and 10 minutes) as for R 15-200 RD were identical for R52.5-200
RD and R5-400 RD with the following exceptions:
Formulation 2: R52.5-200 RD
[0121] Redispersion 2.5 minutes after the gel point: As for the R15-200 RD at the same time
point, but some phase separation is observed after the redispersion. The injectability
was identical with that of R15-200 RD. One weeks' storage was not done.
[0122] Redispersion 10 minutes after the gel point: As for R15-200 RD, but the thinnest
needle that could be used in the injection was 20G. With 19G needle no phase separation
was observed during the injection. One weeks' storage was not done.
Formulation 3: R5-400 RD
[0123] Redispersion 2.5 minutes after the gel point: As for the R15-200 RD at the same time
point, but some phase separation is observed after the redispersion. The injectability
was identical with that of R15-200 RD. One weeks' storage was not done.
[0124] Redispersion 10 minutes after the gel point: As for R15-200 RD, but the thinnest
needle that could be used in the injection was 21 G. With 20G needle no phase separation
was observed during the injection. One weeks' storage was not done.
Example 14 useful for understanding the invention
Encapsulation efficiency of flowing silica compositions
[0125] Horse radish peroxidase (HRP, Sigma-Aldrich) protein was encapsulated into redispersed
flowing silica compositions (R52.5-200 RD, R15-200 RD and R5-200 RD) with 10 % of
HRP (w/w vs SiO
2) and they were further regelled according to the method described in example 1 to
study that the protein is really encapsulated and it is released as a function of
time. The redispersed flowing silica compositions were stored for 9 months at refrigerator
temperature (4 °C) after which the regelling was done as described in example 1. The
regelled silica compositions (A=R52.5-200 RG, B=R15-200 RG and C=R5-200 RG) were immersed
in 0.05 M TRIS buffer solution (pH 7.4, 37 °C). The dissolution study was done in
shaking water bath at 37°C. The enzymatic activity of HRP (as shown in example 9,
HRP preserves its activity well at 4 °C in several formulations) released into the
TRIS buffer at different time points was measured with spectrophotometer (ThermoLabsystems,
Multiscan EX) analyzing the absorbance of yellow colour formed by TMB (Sigma-Aldrich)
at 405 nm. The release rates of HRP are presented in figure 14. The release results
show that HRP is encapsulated and the release occurs as a function of time (the maximum
released amounts in Figure 14 correspond to 35 % (w/w) for A, 16 % (w/w) for B and
55 % (w/w) for C)
[0126] HRP protein was also encapsulated into R15 (molar water-to-TEOS ratio=15 & pH=2)
monoliths (button) and into redispersed flowing silica composition (R13-62 RD). The
redispersed flowing silica composition (R13-62 RD) was then used as a co-precursor
with another silica sol (R=8, pH2), which together resulted in total formulation of
R15 at pH2. The purpose of the study was to show whether there is a difference in
the protein encapsulation and release between a normal R15 monolith and R15 monolith
including a redispersed flowing silica composition ("R15-incRD"), where the protein
was already encapsulated. The HRP content of both sols was 1 mg / ml sol. Both silica
compositions were injected (à 150 µl) on the bottom of 96 well plates well. Monolith
formation occurred without pH adjustment and formed monoliths were dried to constant
weight at constant environment (40 °C and 40 % humidity). The dried monoliths were
immersed in 0.05 M TRIS buffer solution (pH 7.4, 37 °C). The dissolution study was
done in a shaking water bath at 37°C. The enzymatic activity of HRP in the TRIS buffer
at different time points was measured with spectrophotometer (ThermoLabsystems, Multiscan
EX) analyzing the absorbance of yellow colour formed by TMB (Sigma-Aldrich) at 405
nm. After 50 hours of immersion in TRIS, the release results showed that the release
rate of the encapsulated HRP was about 10% slower from R15-incRD than from the common
R15 monolith.
Example 15 useful for understanding the invention
Regelling times of redispersed flowing silica compositions as a function of storage
time
[0127] 24 different redispersed flowing silica compositions (R varied between 2 and 52.5
after the initial sol formation (TEOS was used as the silica precursor) and between
200 and 400 after the redispersion) were stored at two different temperatures (4 °C
and 25 °C) to study the effect of the storing time on the regelling. The redispersed
flowing silica compositions were regelled according to the method described in example
1. The regelling times (time until the gel is formed after addition of salts and/or
sol into the redispersed flowing silica compositions; all the regelations are done
at room temperature) varied between 4-13 minutes at 0 months of storage. As a function
of the storage time, there was some difference between the storage at 4 °C and 25
°C and some variation also at both temperatures as a function of time. For all the
studied compositions, the regelling times were a bit longer (few minutes) for the
compositions stored at 4 °C. After 9 months of aging, the variation in the regelling
times had extended a little bit, they varied between 4-35 minutes and the longer times
(> 20 minutes) were mainly observed for the compositions stored at 4 °C. Some compositions
had a relatively constant regelling times as a function of time, e.g., for R5-400
and R2-200 the regelling times stayed between 5-9 minutes after 1, 3, 5 and 9 months
of storage at room temperature. There was also a trend in the R-values, the higher
R-value after the initial sol formation, e.g., R52.5-400 had somewhat longer regelling
times than compositions with lower R-values (e.g., R5-400) and they varied between
7-15 minutes for R52.5-400 after 3, 5 and 9 months of storage at room temperature.
Example 16 useful for understanding the invention
Size of the silica species in the flowing redispersed silica compositions
[0128] Although several different flowing silica compositions can be injected trough thin
needles (e.g., 27G-30G) so that they stay homogeneously in one phase during and after
the injection, they differ visually from each other. Some formulations contain clearly
visible silica lumps, for some compositions visible lumps cannot be detected. For
some formulations the lumps fall slowly onto the bottom, for some compositions they
stay homogeneously dispersed. One of the formulations, R5-400 RD (by visual observation
homogeneous even without stirring, no lumps can be detected) was studied by dynamic
light scattering and by light microscope. The size distribution of the particles/aggregates/lumps
was found to be broad starting from some tens of nanometers reaching to some tens
of micrometers. Even few larger, individual aggregates could be detected. Based on
observations with a light microscope, the number of larger aggregates (from some tens
of micrometers and larger) seems not to be high.