High-throughput methodologies have been employed to establish structure-property relationships and assess the effectiveness of nonionic steric stabilizers for inverse bicontinuous cubic lyotropic liquid crystalline nanoparticulate dispersions of monoolein and phytantriol. The ability of the stabilizers to disperse the lipids was compared with that of the commonly employed triblock poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(propylene oxide)-poly(ethylene oxide) copolymer Pluronic F127, which was used as a positive control. The poly(ethylene oxide) stearate class of stabilizers (commercially known as Myrj) were discovered to be effective as steric stabilizers for cubosomes, while retaining the internal nanostructure of the "parent" bulk phase. In particular, Myrj 59, with an average of 100 poly(ethylene oxide) units, was more effective than F127 at dispersing phytantriol, forming stable phytantriol cubosome dispersions at a concentration of 0.1 wt %, 5-fold lower than that achievable with Pluronic F127. The discovery of this new effective class of stabilizers for cubosomes, specifically enabled by high-throughput approaches, broadens the versatility of components from which to construct these interesting potential drug delivery and medical imaging nanoparticles.
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