Protein Information

ID 45
Name lysozyme
Synonyms LYZ; LZM; Lysozyme; Lysozyme C; Lysozyme C precursor; Lysozymes; Lysozyme Cs; Lysozyme C precursors

Compound Information

ID 1402
Name methylene chloride
CAS dichloromethane

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
10350502 Young TJ, Johnston KP, Mishima K, Tanaka H: Encapsulation of lysozyme in a biodegradable polymer by precipitation with a vapor-over-liquid antisolvent. J Pharm Sci. 1999 Jun;88(6):640-50.
Lysozyme was encapsulated in biodegradable polymer microspheres which were precipitated from an organic solution by spraying the solution into carbon dioxide. The polymer, either poly (l-lactide) (l-PLA) or poly (DL-lactide-co-glycolide) (PGLA), in dichloromethane solution with suspended lysozyme was sprayed into a CO2 vapor phase through a capillary nozzle to form droplets which solidified after falling into a CO2 liquid phase. By delaying precipitation in the vapor phase, the primary particles became sufficiently large, from 5 to 70 microm, such that they could encapsulate the lysozyme. At an optimal temperature of -20 degrees C, the polymer solution mixed rapidly with CO2, and the precipitated primary particles were sufficiently hard such that agglomeration was markedly reduced compared with higher temperatures. More uniform particles were formed by flowing CO2 at high velocity in a coaxial nozzle to mix the droplets at the CO2 vapor-liquid interface. This process offers a means to produce encapsulated proteins in poly (DL-lactide-co-glycolide) microspheres without earlier limitations of massive polymer agglomeration and limited protein solubility in organic solvents.
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