Composition and concentration gradient dependent catanionic vesicle preparation of long-chain ionic liquid and its interaction study with model protein: An HSA case study

Abstract

Soft nanosystems (micelles, vesicles, reverse micelles, etc.) are highly significant in the biomedical field as a delivery system of biomolecules and drugs because of their easily modulable shape. In recent years, surface-active ionic liquid (SAIL)-based vesicles have gained popularity, with applications in gene therapy, micellar catalysis, protein and drug delivery, among others. This article presents a comparative study on the interaction of cationic-and anionic-rich vesicles prepared using a SAIL (1-hexadecyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride, C16MimCl) and Aerosol OT (AOT) with a model protein (HSA) in aqueous buffer medium at pH 7.4. The interaction study used various physicochemical, spectroscopic, thermodynamic, and morphological measurements. The steady-state fluorescence spectra of the Trp214 residue of HSA were found to change slightly in cationic-rich vesicles, but nearly disappeared in anionic-rich vesicles. This suggests that the tertiary structure of HSA was preserved in cationic-rich vesicles, but broken down in anionic-rich vesicles. DLS experiments show that the volume of cationic-rich vesicles rapidly rises (197.32 nm to 1091.31 nm upon the addition of about 4 μM HSA) without disrupting their vesicular structure, but anionic-rich vesicles split into smaller vesicles upon protein incorporation. The volume expansion of cationic-rich vesicles during protein adsorption is readily visible in TEM micrographs of the protein-vesicle assembly. Zeta potential measurements indicate that electrostatic attraction plays a major role in protein adsorption on cationic-rich vesicle surfaces, whereas electrostatic repulsion on anionic-rich vesicles leads to the disintegration of vesicle structure during protein adsorption. According to the CD analysis, a little structural alteration (~2%) of HSA occurs in anionic-rich vesicles, while no secondary structural change occurs in cationic-rich vesicles. The overall experimental results reveal that, in cationic-rich vesicles, protein loading preserves both the vesicle and protein structure, making it suitable for use as an injectable drug delivery system (DDS), this is not the case with anionic-rich vesicles. As a result, this vesicular system would play a crucial role in biological and biomedical fields for applications such as drug delivery, protein stability, etc.

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Jul 2025
Accepted
15 Dec 2025
First published
25 Dec 2025

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Composition and concentration gradient dependent catanionic vesicle preparation of long-chain ionic liquid and its interaction study with model protein: An HSA case study

S. Ghosh, R. Sardar and S. Dutta, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5CP02915E

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