Studio teorico di membrane bicompatibili per applicazioni farmaceutiche
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Cairo, Patrizia
Tocci, Elena
Curcio, Efrem
Molinari, Raffaele
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Ingegneria Chimica e dei Materiali, Ciclo XXII SSD CHIM/072008-2009; To design advanced dosage forms, suitable carrier materials are used to
overcome the undesirable properties of drug molecules. Hence various
kinds of high-performance biomaterials are being constantly developed.
From the viewpoint of the optimization of pharmacotherapy, drug release should
be controlled in accordance with the therapeutic purpose and pharmacological
properties of active substances.
The main objective of the present thesis was to characterize the
interactions between drugs and drug carriers by using combined molecular
dynamics, molecular mechanics, and docking computational techniques. These
simulations are likely to benefit the study of materials by increasing our
understanding of their chemical and physical properties at a molecular level and
by assisting us in the design of new materials and predicting their properties.
Simulations are usually considerably cheaper and faster than experiments.
Molecular simulations also offer a unique perspective on the molecular level
processes controlling structural, physical, optical, chemical, mechanical, and
transport properties.
In particular the attention was put on cyclodextrinic carriers supported on
membrane and molecularly imprinted polymers.
Thus, structural information, such as the geometries of the cyclodextrinic
complexes, and thermodynamic data, i.e. the variation of the enthalpy, were
considered to draw a complete picture of the βCD-drug interactions. The results
were in good agreement with the experimental data found in the measurement of
stability constants. Finally the molecular dynamics on the polymeric system
formed by adding on the surface of PEEK-WC the βCD-drug complex showed the
release of the included drug in a water solution.
The docking and molecular mechanics techniques provided also
informations on the geometry and the energy of complexation of a β-cyclodextrin
derivative with naringin showing that the driving force for the host-guest
complexation is due to the van der Waals interaction. Moreover the molecular
dynamics calculations provided details on the complexation of naringin on the
PEEK-WC surface containing the β-cyclodextrin derivative.
The binding affinity and selectivity of MIP towards drug template were
calculated from the interaction energy between the ligand and the monomers and
from docking simulations, respectively, as also the number of hydrogen bonds
was determined. Our computational results shown a higher interaction energy
between the drug template and monomers and justified the experimental data of
selective recognition and rebinding of the template in terms of MIP performance
confirming the reliability of our computational method. Moreover the diffusion
coefficient of 5-FU into a PMAA matrix on the release step was determined.Thus, atomistic modelling of material structure was a tool for understanding the
mechanisms of physical processes on atomic and molecular levels, gaining
insights into the molecular origins of behaviour of bulk polymers.; Università degli Studi della CalabriaSoggetto
Ingegneria Chimica; Membrane; Materiali biocompatibili
Relazione
CHIM/07;