Cargando…

Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation

Mucoadhesive particles (MAP) have been widely explored for pulmonary drug delivery because of their perceived benefits in improving particle residence in the lungs. However, retention of particles adhesively trapped in airway mucus may be limited by physiologic mucus clearance mechanisms. In contras...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schneider, Craig S., Xu, Qingguo, Boylan, Nicholas J., Chisholm, Jane, Tang, Benjamin C., Schuster, Benjamin S., Henning, Andreas, Ensign, Laura M., Lee, Ethan, Adstamongkonkul, Pichet, Simons, Brian W., Wang, Sho-Yu S., Gong, Xiaoqun, Yu, Tao, Boyle, Michael P., Suk, Jung Soo, Hanes, Justin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for the Advancement of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5381952/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28435870
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601556
_version_ 1782520020623949824
author Schneider, Craig S.
Xu, Qingguo
Boylan, Nicholas J.
Chisholm, Jane
Tang, Benjamin C.
Schuster, Benjamin S.
Henning, Andreas
Ensign, Laura M.
Lee, Ethan
Adstamongkonkul, Pichet
Simons, Brian W.
Wang, Sho-Yu S.
Gong, Xiaoqun
Yu, Tao
Boyle, Michael P.
Suk, Jung Soo
Hanes, Justin
author_facet Schneider, Craig S.
Xu, Qingguo
Boylan, Nicholas J.
Chisholm, Jane
Tang, Benjamin C.
Schuster, Benjamin S.
Henning, Andreas
Ensign, Laura M.
Lee, Ethan
Adstamongkonkul, Pichet
Simons, Brian W.
Wang, Sho-Yu S.
Gong, Xiaoqun
Yu, Tao
Boyle, Michael P.
Suk, Jung Soo
Hanes, Justin
author_sort Schneider, Craig S.
collection PubMed
description Mucoadhesive particles (MAP) have been widely explored for pulmonary drug delivery because of their perceived benefits in improving particle residence in the lungs. However, retention of particles adhesively trapped in airway mucus may be limited by physiologic mucus clearance mechanisms. In contrast, particles that avoid mucoadhesion and have diameters smaller than mucus mesh spacings rapidly penetrate mucus layers [mucus-penetrating particles (MPP)], which we hypothesized would provide prolonged lung retention compared to MAP. We compared in vivo behaviors of variously sized, polystyrene-based MAP and MPP in the lungs following inhalation. MAP, regardless of particle size, were aggregated and poorly distributed throughout the airways, leading to rapid clearance from the lungs. Conversely, MPP as large as 300 nm exhibited uniform distribution and markedly enhanced retention compared to size-matched MAP. On the basis of these findings, we formulated biodegradable MPP (b-MPP) with an average diameter of <300 nm and examined their behavior following inhalation relative to similarly sized biodegradable MAP (b-MAP). Although b-MPP diffused rapidly through human airway mucus ex vivo, b-MAP did not. Rapid b-MPP movements in mucus ex vivo correlated to a more uniform distribution within the airways and enhanced lung retention time as compared to b-MAP. Furthermore, inhalation of b-MPP loaded with dexamethasone sodium phosphate (DP) significantly reduced inflammation in a mouse model of acute lung inflammation compared to both carrier-free DP and DP-loaded MAP. These studies provide a careful head-to-head comparison of MAP versus MPP following inhalation and challenge a long-standing dogma that favored the use of MAP for pulmonary drug delivery.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5381952
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53819522017-04-21 Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation Schneider, Craig S. Xu, Qingguo Boylan, Nicholas J. Chisholm, Jane Tang, Benjamin C. Schuster, Benjamin S. Henning, Andreas Ensign, Laura M. Lee, Ethan Adstamongkonkul, Pichet Simons, Brian W. Wang, Sho-Yu S. Gong, Xiaoqun Yu, Tao Boyle, Michael P. Suk, Jung Soo Hanes, Justin Sci Adv Research Articles Mucoadhesive particles (MAP) have been widely explored for pulmonary drug delivery because of their perceived benefits in improving particle residence in the lungs. However, retention of particles adhesively trapped in airway mucus may be limited by physiologic mucus clearance mechanisms. In contrast, particles that avoid mucoadhesion and have diameters smaller than mucus mesh spacings rapidly penetrate mucus layers [mucus-penetrating particles (MPP)], which we hypothesized would provide prolonged lung retention compared to MAP. We compared in vivo behaviors of variously sized, polystyrene-based MAP and MPP in the lungs following inhalation. MAP, regardless of particle size, were aggregated and poorly distributed throughout the airways, leading to rapid clearance from the lungs. Conversely, MPP as large as 300 nm exhibited uniform distribution and markedly enhanced retention compared to size-matched MAP. On the basis of these findings, we formulated biodegradable MPP (b-MPP) with an average diameter of <300 nm and examined their behavior following inhalation relative to similarly sized biodegradable MAP (b-MAP). Although b-MPP diffused rapidly through human airway mucus ex vivo, b-MAP did not. Rapid b-MPP movements in mucus ex vivo correlated to a more uniform distribution within the airways and enhanced lung retention time as compared to b-MAP. Furthermore, inhalation of b-MPP loaded with dexamethasone sodium phosphate (DP) significantly reduced inflammation in a mouse model of acute lung inflammation compared to both carrier-free DP and DP-loaded MAP. These studies provide a careful head-to-head comparison of MAP versus MPP following inhalation and challenge a long-standing dogma that favored the use of MAP for pulmonary drug delivery. American Association for the Advancement of Science 2017-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5381952/ /pubmed/28435870 http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601556 Text en Copyright © 2017, The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Schneider, Craig S.
Xu, Qingguo
Boylan, Nicholas J.
Chisholm, Jane
Tang, Benjamin C.
Schuster, Benjamin S.
Henning, Andreas
Ensign, Laura M.
Lee, Ethan
Adstamongkonkul, Pichet
Simons, Brian W.
Wang, Sho-Yu S.
Gong, Xiaoqun
Yu, Tao
Boyle, Michael P.
Suk, Jung Soo
Hanes, Justin
Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title_full Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title_fullStr Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title_full_unstemmed Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title_short Nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
title_sort nanoparticles that do not adhere to mucus provide uniform and long-lasting drug delivery to airways following inhalation
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5381952/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28435870
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601556
work_keys_str_mv AT schneidercraigs nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT xuqingguo nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT boylannicholasj nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT chisholmjane nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT tangbenjaminc nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT schusterbenjamins nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT henningandreas nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT ensignlauram nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT leeethan nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT adstamongkonkulpichet nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT simonsbrianw nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT wangshoyus nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT gongxiaoqun nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT yutao nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT boylemichaelp nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT sukjungsoo nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation
AT hanesjustin nanoparticlesthatdonotadheretomucusprovideuniformandlonglastingdrugdeliverytoairwaysfollowinginhalation