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Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases

Diseases of the pulmonary alveolus, such as pulmonary fibrosis, are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, but exceedingly few drugs are developed for them. A major reason for this gap is that after inhalation, drugs are quickly whisked away from alveoli due to their high perfusion. To solve thi...

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Autores principales: Ferguson, Laura T., Ma, Xiaonan, Myerson, Jacob W., Wu, Jichuan, Glassman, Patrick M., Zamora, Marco E., Hood, Elizabeth D., Zaleski, Michael, Shen, Mengwen, Essien, Eno-Obong, Shuvaev, Vladimir V., Brenner, Jacob S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10231510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37266328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anbr.202200106
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author Ferguson, Laura T.
Ma, Xiaonan
Myerson, Jacob W.
Wu, Jichuan
Glassman, Patrick M.
Zamora, Marco E.
Hood, Elizabeth D.
Zaleski, Michael
Shen, Mengwen
Essien, Eno-Obong
Shuvaev, Vladimir V.
Brenner, Jacob S.
author_facet Ferguson, Laura T.
Ma, Xiaonan
Myerson, Jacob W.
Wu, Jichuan
Glassman, Patrick M.
Zamora, Marco E.
Hood, Elizabeth D.
Zaleski, Michael
Shen, Mengwen
Essien, Eno-Obong
Shuvaev, Vladimir V.
Brenner, Jacob S.
author_sort Ferguson, Laura T.
collection PubMed
description Diseases of the pulmonary alveolus, such as pulmonary fibrosis, are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, but exceedingly few drugs are developed for them. A major reason for this gap is that after inhalation, drugs are quickly whisked away from alveoli due to their high perfusion. To solve this problem, the mechanisms by which nano‐scale drug carriers dramatically improve lung pharmacokinetics using an inhalable liposome formulation containing nintedanib, an antifibrotic for pulmonary fibrosis, are studied. Direct instillation of liposomes in murine lung increases nintedanib's total lung delivery over time by 8000‐fold and lung half life by tenfold, compared to oral nintedanib. Counterintuitively, it is shown that pulmonary surfactant neither lyses nor aggregates the liposomes. Instead, each lung compartment (alveolar fluid, alveolar leukocytes, and parenchyma) elutes liposomes over 24 h, likely serving as “drug depots.” After deposition in the surfactant layer, liposomes are transferred over 3–6 h to alveolar leukocytes (which take up a surprisingly minor 1–5% of total lung dose instilled) in a nonsaturable fashion. Further, all cell layers of the lung parenchyma take up liposomes. These and other mechanisms elucidated here should guide engineering of future inhaled nanomedicine for alveolar diseases.
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spelling pubmed-102315102023-06-01 Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases Ferguson, Laura T. Ma, Xiaonan Myerson, Jacob W. Wu, Jichuan Glassman, Patrick M. Zamora, Marco E. Hood, Elizabeth D. Zaleski, Michael Shen, Mengwen Essien, Eno-Obong Shuvaev, Vladimir V. Brenner, Jacob S. Adv Nanobiomed Res Research Articles Diseases of the pulmonary alveolus, such as pulmonary fibrosis, are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, but exceedingly few drugs are developed for them. A major reason for this gap is that after inhalation, drugs are quickly whisked away from alveoli due to their high perfusion. To solve this problem, the mechanisms by which nano‐scale drug carriers dramatically improve lung pharmacokinetics using an inhalable liposome formulation containing nintedanib, an antifibrotic for pulmonary fibrosis, are studied. Direct instillation of liposomes in murine lung increases nintedanib's total lung delivery over time by 8000‐fold and lung half life by tenfold, compared to oral nintedanib. Counterintuitively, it is shown that pulmonary surfactant neither lyses nor aggregates the liposomes. Instead, each lung compartment (alveolar fluid, alveolar leukocytes, and parenchyma) elutes liposomes over 24 h, likely serving as “drug depots.” After deposition in the surfactant layer, liposomes are transferred over 3–6 h to alveolar leukocytes (which take up a surprisingly minor 1–5% of total lung dose instilled) in a nonsaturable fashion. Further, all cell layers of the lung parenchyma take up liposomes. These and other mechanisms elucidated here should guide engineering of future inhaled nanomedicine for alveolar diseases. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-01-27 2023-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10231510/ /pubmed/37266328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anbr.202200106 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Advanced NanoBiomed Research published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Ferguson, Laura T.
Ma, Xiaonan
Myerson, Jacob W.
Wu, Jichuan
Glassman, Patrick M.
Zamora, Marco E.
Hood, Elizabeth D.
Zaleski, Michael
Shen, Mengwen
Essien, Eno-Obong
Shuvaev, Vladimir V.
Brenner, Jacob S.
Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title_full Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title_fullStr Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title_full_unstemmed Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title_short Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases
title_sort mechanisms by which liposomes improve inhaled drug delivery for alveolar diseases
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10231510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37266328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anbr.202200106
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