Spontaneous Transfer of Indocyanine Green from Liposomes
to Albumin Is Inhibited by the Antioxidant α‑Tocopherol
Posted on 2022-09-20 - 19:44
Indocyanine
Green (ICG) is a clinically approved organic dye with
near-infrared absorption and fluorescence. Over the years, many efforts
to improve the photophysical and pharmacokinetic properties of ICG
have investigated numerous nanoparticle formulations, especially liposomes
with membrane-embedded ICG. A series of systematic absorption and
fluorescence experiments, including FRET experiments using ICG as
a fluorescence energy acceptor, found that ICG transfers spontaneously
from liposomes to albumin protein residing in the external solution
with a half-life of ∼10 min at 37 °C. Moreover, transfer
of ICG from liposome membranes to external albumin reduces light-activated
leakage from thermosensitive liposomes with membrane-embedded ICG. A survey of lipophilic liposome additives discovered that
the presence of clinically approved antioxidant, α-tocopherol,
greatly increases ICG retention in the liposomes (presumably by forming
favorable aromatic stacking interactions), inhibits ICG photobleaching
and prevents albumin-induced reduction of light-triggered liposome
leakage. This new insight will help researchers with the specific
task of optimizing ICG-containing liposomes for fluorescence imaging
or phototherapeutics. More broadly, the results suggest a broader
design concept concerning light triggered liposome leakage, that is,
proximity of the light absorbing dye to the bilayer membrane is a
critical design feature that impacts the extent of liposome leakage.
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Gamage, Rananjaya
S.; Smith, Bradley D. (1753). Spontaneous Transfer of Indocyanine Green from Liposomes
to Albumin Is Inhibited by the Antioxidant α‑Tocopherol. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c01715