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Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat

[Image: see text] In this work, we set out to better understand how the permeation enhancer sodium caprate (C10) influences the intestinal absorption of macromolecules. FITC-dextran 4000 (FD4) was selected as a model compound and formulated with 50–300 mM C10. Absorption was studied after bolus inst...

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Autores principales: Berg, Staffan, Kärrberg, Lillevi, Suljovic, Denny, Seeliger, Frank, Söderberg, Magnus, Perez-Alcazar, Marta, Van Zuydam, Natalie, Abrahamsson, Bertil, Hugerth, Andreas M, Davies, Nigel, Bergström, Christel A. S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8728734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34928160
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.1c00724
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author Berg, Staffan
Kärrberg, Lillevi
Suljovic, Denny
Seeliger, Frank
Söderberg, Magnus
Perez-Alcazar, Marta
Van Zuydam, Natalie
Abrahamsson, Bertil
Hugerth, Andreas M
Davies, Nigel
Bergström, Christel A. S.
author_facet Berg, Staffan
Kärrberg, Lillevi
Suljovic, Denny
Seeliger, Frank
Söderberg, Magnus
Perez-Alcazar, Marta
Van Zuydam, Natalie
Abrahamsson, Bertil
Hugerth, Andreas M
Davies, Nigel
Bergström, Christel A. S.
author_sort Berg, Staffan
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] In this work, we set out to better understand how the permeation enhancer sodium caprate (C10) influences the intestinal absorption of macromolecules. FITC-dextran 4000 (FD4) was selected as a model compound and formulated with 50–300 mM C10. Absorption was studied after bolus instillation of liquid formulation to the duodenum of anesthetized rats and intravenously as a reference, whereafter plasma samples were taken and analyzed for FD4 content. It was found that the AUC and C(max) of FD4 increased with increasing C10 concentration. Higher C10 concentrations were associated with an increased and extended absorption but also increased epithelial damage. Depending on the C10 concentration, the intestinal epithelium showed significant recovery already at 60–120 min after administration. At the highest studied C10 concentrations (100 and 300 mM), the absorption of FD4 was not affected by the colloidal structures of C10, with similar absorption obtained when C10 was administered as micelles (pH 8.5) and as vesicles (pH 6.5). In contrast, the FD4 absorption was lower when C10 was administered at 50 mM formulated as micelles as compared to vesicles. Intestinal dilution of C10 and FD4 revealed a trend of decreasing FD4 absorption with increasing intestinal dilution. However, the effect was smaller than that of altering the total administered C10 dose. Absorption was similar when the formulations were prepared in simulated intestinal fluids containing mixed micelles of bile salts and phospholipids and in simple buffer solution. The findings in this study suggest that in order to optimally enhance the absorption of macromolecules, high (≥100 mM) initial intestinal C10 concentrations are likely needed and that both the concentration and total dose of C10 are important parameters.
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spelling pubmed-87287342022-01-05 Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat Berg, Staffan Kärrberg, Lillevi Suljovic, Denny Seeliger, Frank Söderberg, Magnus Perez-Alcazar, Marta Van Zuydam, Natalie Abrahamsson, Bertil Hugerth, Andreas M Davies, Nigel Bergström, Christel A. S. Mol Pharm [Image: see text] In this work, we set out to better understand how the permeation enhancer sodium caprate (C10) influences the intestinal absorption of macromolecules. FITC-dextran 4000 (FD4) was selected as a model compound and formulated with 50–300 mM C10. Absorption was studied after bolus instillation of liquid formulation to the duodenum of anesthetized rats and intravenously as a reference, whereafter plasma samples were taken and analyzed for FD4 content. It was found that the AUC and C(max) of FD4 increased with increasing C10 concentration. Higher C10 concentrations were associated with an increased and extended absorption but also increased epithelial damage. Depending on the C10 concentration, the intestinal epithelium showed significant recovery already at 60–120 min after administration. At the highest studied C10 concentrations (100 and 300 mM), the absorption of FD4 was not affected by the colloidal structures of C10, with similar absorption obtained when C10 was administered as micelles (pH 8.5) and as vesicles (pH 6.5). In contrast, the FD4 absorption was lower when C10 was administered at 50 mM formulated as micelles as compared to vesicles. Intestinal dilution of C10 and FD4 revealed a trend of decreasing FD4 absorption with increasing intestinal dilution. However, the effect was smaller than that of altering the total administered C10 dose. Absorption was similar when the formulations were prepared in simulated intestinal fluids containing mixed micelles of bile salts and phospholipids and in simple buffer solution. The findings in this study suggest that in order to optimally enhance the absorption of macromolecules, high (≥100 mM) initial intestinal C10 concentrations are likely needed and that both the concentration and total dose of C10 are important parameters. American Chemical Society 2021-12-20 2022-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8728734/ /pubmed/34928160 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.1c00724 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Berg, Staffan
Kärrberg, Lillevi
Suljovic, Denny
Seeliger, Frank
Söderberg, Magnus
Perez-Alcazar, Marta
Van Zuydam, Natalie
Abrahamsson, Bertil
Hugerth, Andreas M
Davies, Nigel
Bergström, Christel A. S.
Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title_full Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title_fullStr Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title_short Impact of Intestinal Concentration and Colloidal Structure on the Permeation-Enhancing Efficiency of Sodium Caprate in the Rat
title_sort impact of intestinal concentration and colloidal structure on the permeation-enhancing efficiency of sodium caprate in the rat
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8728734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34928160
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.1c00724
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