Supramolecular citrate poly allylamine hydrochloride nanoparticles for citrate delivery and calcium oxalate nanocrystal dissolution

Paolo Di Gianvincenzo,Marcos Fernandez Leyes, Kamonchat Boonkam, Alejandro Fábrega Puentes, Santiago Gimenez Reyes,Alessandro Nicola Nardi, Alessio Olivieri, Siwanut Pummarin, Nuntaporn Kamonsutthipaijit,Heinz Amenitsch,Hernan Ritacco, Marco D'Abramo,Maria Grazia Ortore, Chanchai Boonla,Sergio E. Moya

Journal of Colloid and Interface Science(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Hypothesis Renal calculi (kidney stones) are mainly made by calcium oxalate and can cause different complications including malfunction of the kidney. The most important urinary stone inhibitors are citrate molecules. Unfortunately, the amount of citrate reaching the kidney after oral ingestion is low. We hypothesized that nanoparticles of polyallylamine hydrochloride (CIT-PAH) carrying citrate ions could simultaneously deliver citrates while PAH would complex oxalate triggering dissolution and removal of CaOx nanocrystals. Experiments We successfully prepared nanoparticles of citrate ions with polyallylamine hydrochloride (CIT-PAH), PAH with oxalate (OX-PAH) and characterize them by Small Angle X ray Scattering (SAXS), Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) and NMR. Dissolution of CaOx nanocrystals in presence of CIT-PAH have been followed with Wide Angle Xray Scattering (WAXS), DLS and Confocal Raman Microscopy. Raman spectroscopy was used to study the dissolution of crystals in synthetic urine samples. The release of citrate from CIT-PAH was followed by diffusion NMR. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out to study the interaction of CIT and OX ions with PAH. Findings CIT-PAH nanoparticles dissolves CaOx nanocrysPAH.as shown by NMR, DLS, TEM and WAXS in water and by Raman spectroscopy in artificial human urine. WAXS and Raman show that the crystal structure of CaOx disappears in the presence of CIT-PAH. DLS shows that the time required for CaOX dissolution will depend on the concentration of CIT-PAH NPs. NMR proves that citrate ions are released from the CIT PAH NPs during CaOX dissolution, MD simulations showed that oxalates exhibit a stronger interaction for PAH than citrate, explaining the removal of oxalate ions and replacement of the citrate in the polymer nanoparticles.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要