6533b86dfe1ef96bd12cab75

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Deconvolution procedure of the UV-vis spectra. A powerful tool for the estimation of the binding of a model drug to specific solubilisation loci of bio-compatible aqueous surfactant-forming micelle

Ilaria CalabreseMarcello MerliMaria Liria Turco Liveri

subject

Atomic and Molecular Physics and OpticOxazineAnalytical chemistrySpecific solubilisation lociTween 20PolysorbatesDeconvolutionNile RedMicelleSpectral lineUV-vis spectraAnalytical ChemistrySurface-Active Agentchemistry.chemical_compoundSurface-Active AgentsUltraviolet visible spectroscopycmc; Deconvolution; Nile Red; Specific solubilisation loci; Tween 20; UV-vis spectra; Binding Sites; Oxazines; Polysorbates; Solubility; Spectrophotometry Ultraviolet; Surface-Active Agents; Micelles; Instrumentation; Atomic and Molecular Physics and Optics; Analytical Chemistry; Spectroscopy; Medicine (all)Pulmonary surfactantOxazinesInstrumentationSpectroscopyMicellesAqueous solutionBinding SitesChemistryMedicine (all)Nile redBinding SiteBinding constantAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsPolysorbateSolubilitycmcSpectrophotometry UltravioletDeconvolutionMicelle

description

UV-vis-spectra evolution of Nile Red loaded into Tween 20 micelles with pH and [Tween 20] have been analysed in a non-conventional manner by exploiting the deconvolution method. The number of buried sub-bands has been found to depend on both pH and bio-surfactant concentration, whose positions have been associated to Nile Red confined in aqueous solution and in the three micellar solubilisation sites. For the first time, by using an extended classical two-pseudo-phases-model, the robust treatment of the spectrophotometric data allows the estimation of Nile Red binding constant to the available loci. Hosting capability towards Nile Red is exalted by the pH enhancement. Comparison between binding constant values classically evaluated and those estimated by the deconvolution protocol unveiled that overall binding values perfectly match with the mean values of the local binding sites. This result suggests that deconvolution procedure provides more precise and reliable values, which are more representative of drug confinement.

10.1016/j.saa.2014.12.095http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84923221971&partnerID=40&md5=0300e7bcdd82a893074be6bca6f99d58