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An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer

The use of nanocarriers is being researched to achieve oral peptide delivery. Insulin-associated anionic polyelectrolyte nanoparticle complexes (PECs) were formed that comprised hyaluronic acid and chitosan in an optimum mass mixing ratio of 5:1 (MR 5), followed by coating with a pH-dependent polyme...

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Autores principales: Sladek, Svenja, McCartney, Fiona, Eskander, Mena, Dunne, David J., Santos-Martinez, Maria Jose, Benetti, Federico, Tajber, Lidia, Brayden, David J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7151133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32178442
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12030259
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author Sladek, Svenja
McCartney, Fiona
Eskander, Mena
Dunne, David J.
Santos-Martinez, Maria Jose
Benetti, Federico
Tajber, Lidia
Brayden, David J.
author_facet Sladek, Svenja
McCartney, Fiona
Eskander, Mena
Dunne, David J.
Santos-Martinez, Maria Jose
Benetti, Federico
Tajber, Lidia
Brayden, David J.
author_sort Sladek, Svenja
collection PubMed
description The use of nanocarriers is being researched to achieve oral peptide delivery. Insulin-associated anionic polyelectrolyte nanoparticle complexes (PECs) were formed that comprised hyaluronic acid and chitosan in an optimum mass mixing ratio of 5:1 (MR 5), followed by coating with a pH-dependent polymer. Free insulin was separated from PECs by size exclusion chromatography and then measured by HPLC. The association efficiency of insulin in PECs was >95% and the loading was ~83 µg/mg particles. Dynamic light scattering and nanoparticle tracking analysis of PECs revealed low polydispersity, a negative zeta potential range of −40 to −50 mV, and a diameter range of 95–200 nm. Dissolution studies in simulated small intestinal fluid (FaSSIF-V2) revealed that the PECs were colloidally stable. PECs that were coated with Eudragit(®) L-100 delayed insulin release in FaSSIF-V2 and protected insulin against pancreatin attack more than uncoated PECs. Uncoated anionic PECs interacted weakly with mucin in vitro and were non-cytotoxic to Caco-2 cells. The coated and uncoated PECs, both concentrated further by ultrafiltration, permitted dosing of 50 IU/kg in rat jejunal instillations, but they failed to reduce plasma glucose or deliver insulin to the blood. When ad-mixed with the permeation enhancer (PE), sucrose laurate (100 mM), the physicochemical parameters of coated PECs were relatively unchanged, however blood glucose was reduced by 70%. In conclusion, the use of a PE allowed for the PEC-released bioactive insulin to permeate the jejunum. This has implications for the design of orally delivered particles that can release the payload when formulated with enhancers.
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spelling pubmed-71511332020-04-20 An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer Sladek, Svenja McCartney, Fiona Eskander, Mena Dunne, David J. Santos-Martinez, Maria Jose Benetti, Federico Tajber, Lidia Brayden, David J. Pharmaceutics Article The use of nanocarriers is being researched to achieve oral peptide delivery. Insulin-associated anionic polyelectrolyte nanoparticle complexes (PECs) were formed that comprised hyaluronic acid and chitosan in an optimum mass mixing ratio of 5:1 (MR 5), followed by coating with a pH-dependent polymer. Free insulin was separated from PECs by size exclusion chromatography and then measured by HPLC. The association efficiency of insulin in PECs was >95% and the loading was ~83 µg/mg particles. Dynamic light scattering and nanoparticle tracking analysis of PECs revealed low polydispersity, a negative zeta potential range of −40 to −50 mV, and a diameter range of 95–200 nm. Dissolution studies in simulated small intestinal fluid (FaSSIF-V2) revealed that the PECs were colloidally stable. PECs that were coated with Eudragit(®) L-100 delayed insulin release in FaSSIF-V2 and protected insulin against pancreatin attack more than uncoated PECs. Uncoated anionic PECs interacted weakly with mucin in vitro and were non-cytotoxic to Caco-2 cells. The coated and uncoated PECs, both concentrated further by ultrafiltration, permitted dosing of 50 IU/kg in rat jejunal instillations, but they failed to reduce plasma glucose or deliver insulin to the blood. When ad-mixed with the permeation enhancer (PE), sucrose laurate (100 mM), the physicochemical parameters of coated PECs were relatively unchanged, however blood glucose was reduced by 70%. In conclusion, the use of a PE allowed for the PEC-released bioactive insulin to permeate the jejunum. This has implications for the design of orally delivered particles that can release the payload when formulated with enhancers. MDPI 2020-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7151133/ /pubmed/32178442 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12030259 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sladek, Svenja
McCartney, Fiona
Eskander, Mena
Dunne, David J.
Santos-Martinez, Maria Jose
Benetti, Federico
Tajber, Lidia
Brayden, David J.
An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title_full An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title_fullStr An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title_full_unstemmed An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title_short An Enteric-Coated Polyelectrolyte Nanocomplex Delivers Insulin in Rat Intestinal Instillations When Combined with a Permeation Enhancer
title_sort enteric-coated polyelectrolyte nanocomplex delivers insulin in rat intestinal instillations when combined with a permeation enhancer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7151133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32178442
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12030259
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