Preparation and in Vitro Evaluation of Primaquine-Conjugated
Gum Arabic Microspheres
K. K. Nishi and A. Jayakrishnan*
Polymer Chemistry Division, Biomedical Technology Wing, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical
Sciences & Technology, Satelmond Palace Campus, Trivandrum 695 012, India
Received January 24, 2004; Revised Manuscript Received April 30, 2004
Gum arabic, a branched polysaccharide, was oxidized using periodate to generate reactive aldehyde groups
on the biopolymer. Primaquine, an 8-aminoquinoline, was covalently coupled onto oxidized gum arabic via
an imine bond and simultaneously fabricated into microspheres of less than 2 μm in size by heat denaturation
in a reverse emulsion of 1:1 light paraffin oil and toluene stabilized by sorbitan sesquioleate as the surfactant.
The covalent binding of primaquine to the polysaccharide using the clinically used water-soluble form of
the drug primaquine phosphate was achieved in the presence of borate buffer of pH 11. Up to 35% of the
drug could be bound to the polymer backbone depending on the concentration of the drug employed initially
and the degree of oxidation of the polysaccharide. Interestingly, both the aliphatic and the hindered aromatic
amino groups of primaquine were found to react with the aldehyde functions through Schiff base formation
leading to cross-linking of the polysaccharide with the drug itself. In vitro release of the drug from
microspheres into phosphate buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4, 0.1 M) at 37 °C showed that the release of
primaquine from the matrix was slow, although gradually increased with time. The maximum released was
below 50% of the drug payload even after 10 days. Release into simulated gastric and intestinal fluids was
faster compared to the release in PBS due to rapid hydrolysis of the Schiff’s linkage in the gastric fluid. A
possible reason for the poor hydrolytic susceptibility of the Schiff’s linkage is suggested based on the unequal
reactivity of the amino groups on primaquine and its relevance in possible therapeutic application of this
polymer-drug conjugate discussed.
Introduction
Primaquine, an 8-aminoquinoline, and some of its deriva-
tives are potent drugs in the treatment of malaria as well as
other parasitic diseases such as leishmaniasis.
1-8
The clinical
use of primaquine, however, poses problems due to its
toxicity. Primaquine may cause nausea, abdominal pain, and
oxidant hemolysis with methemoglobinemia, anemia, and
hemoglobinurea and is contraindicated in patients with
different variants of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
deficiency.
1
To improve the therapeutic efficacy of the drug
and diminish its toxicity, various approaches have been
examined. These include linking the drug to a carrier protein
such as albumin,
9
linking peptide derivatives of the drug onto
biodegradable polyacryl starch microspheres,
10
encapsulation
in polycyanoacrylate and polylactide nanoparticles,
3,11
in
erythrocytes
12
and in liposomes.
13,14
Polysaccharides constitute an important class of bio-
materials as most of them exhibit good biocompatibility and
biodegradability, and a number of drug delivery approaches
have been reported in the literature using polysaccharides
as drug carriers.
15
To the best of our knowledge, there is
very little information in the published literature on the use
of polysaccharides as drug delivery vehicles for 8-amino-
quinoloines such as primaquine.
10
Gum arabic is a water-
soluble natural polysaccharide obtained from the exudate of
the acacia tree. This highly branched polysaccharide is a
complex mixture of Ca, Mg, and K salts of arabic acid that
contains galactose, rhamnose, glucuronic acid, 4-O-methyl
glucuronic acid, and arabinose residues.
16
The molecular
structure of gum arabic consists of mainly three compo-
nents: the major component being arabinogalactan (90%)
having a low (0.5%) protein content, the second being
arabinogalactan (<10%) with a high protein content (10%),
and the third component consisting less than 1% includes
glycoprotein having around 50% protein content.
17
It is
extensively used as a food additive
18
and is reported to be
fermented and metabolized in the caecum and the colon.
19,20
Periodate oxidation of polysaccharides offers a convenient
route to synthesize polymer-drug conjugates especially with
drugs possessing aliphatic amino functions via imino bonds
with the aldehyde groups of the oxidized polysaccharide. In
a recent report, the synthesis of soluble amphotericin
B-arabinogalactan conjugate of reduced toxicity and en-
hanced therapeutic efficacy was demonstrated by periodate
oxidation of the polysaccharide followed by coupling the
amino group-containing antibiotic onto the polymer.
21
Being
a branched polysaccharide, gum arabic is a good candidate
for periodate oxidation and there has not been any studies
on the use of oxidized gum arabic as a drug carrier.
Primaquine contains an aliphatic primary amino group as
well as a hindered aromatic amino group of unequal
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dr_jkrishnan@
sify.com. Fax: +91-471-2341814.
1489 Biomacromolecules 2004, 5, 1489-1495
10.1021/bm0499435 CCC: $27.50 © 2004 American Chemical Society
Published on Web 06/15/2004