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Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat

[Image: see text] Peptide drugs and biologics provide opportunities for treatments of many diseases. However, due to their poor stability and permeability in the gastrointestinal tract, the oral bioavailability of peptide drugs is negligible. Nanoparticle formulations have been proposed to circumven...

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Autores principales: Lundquist, Patrik, Khodus, Georgiy, Niu, Zhigao, Thwala, Lungile Nomcebo, McCartney, Fiona, Simoff, Ivailo, Andersson, Ellen, Beloqui, Ana, Mabondzo, Aloise, Robla, Sandra, Webb, Dominic-Luc, Hellström, Per M., Keita, Åsa V, Sima, Eduardo, Csaba, Noemi, Sundbom, Magnus, Preat, Veronique, Brayden, David J., Alonso, Maria Jose, Artursson, Per
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9527806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35998570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c04330
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author Lundquist, Patrik
Khodus, Georgiy
Niu, Zhigao
Thwala, Lungile Nomcebo
McCartney, Fiona
Simoff, Ivailo
Andersson, Ellen
Beloqui, Ana
Mabondzo, Aloise
Robla, Sandra
Webb, Dominic-Luc
Hellström, Per M.
Keita, Åsa V
Sima, Eduardo
Csaba, Noemi
Sundbom, Magnus
Preat, Veronique
Brayden, David J.
Alonso, Maria Jose
Artursson, Per
author_facet Lundquist, Patrik
Khodus, Georgiy
Niu, Zhigao
Thwala, Lungile Nomcebo
McCartney, Fiona
Simoff, Ivailo
Andersson, Ellen
Beloqui, Ana
Mabondzo, Aloise
Robla, Sandra
Webb, Dominic-Luc
Hellström, Per M.
Keita, Åsa V
Sima, Eduardo
Csaba, Noemi
Sundbom, Magnus
Preat, Veronique
Brayden, David J.
Alonso, Maria Jose
Artursson, Per
author_sort Lundquist, Patrik
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Peptide drugs and biologics provide opportunities for treatments of many diseases. However, due to their poor stability and permeability in the gastrointestinal tract, the oral bioavailability of peptide drugs is negligible. Nanoparticle formulations have been proposed to circumvent these hurdles, but systemic exposure of orally administered peptide drugs has remained elusive. In this study, we investigated the absorption mechanisms of four insulin-loaded arginine-rich nanoparticles displaying differing composition and surface characteristics, developed within the pan-European consortium TRANS-INT. The transport mechanisms and major barriers to nanoparticle permeability were investigated in freshly isolated human jejunal tissue. Cytokine release profiles and standard toxicity markers indicated that the nanoparticles were nontoxic. Three out of four nanoparticles displayed pronounced binding to the mucus layer and did not reach the epithelium. One nanoparticle composed of a mucus inert shell and cell-penetrating octarginine (ENCP), showed significant uptake by the intestinal epithelium corresponding to 28 ± 9% of the administered nanoparticle dose, as determined by super-resolution microscopy. Only a small fraction of nanoparticles taken up by epithelia went on to be transcytosed via a dynamin-dependent process. In situ studies in intact rat jejunal loops confirmed the results from human tissue regarding mucus binding, epithelial uptake, and negligible insulin bioavailability. In conclusion, while none of the four arginine-rich nanoparticles supported systemic insulin delivery, ENCP displayed a consistently high uptake along the intestinal villi. It is proposed that ENCP should be further investigated for local delivery of therapeutics to the intestinal mucosa.
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spelling pubmed-95278062022-10-04 Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat Lundquist, Patrik Khodus, Georgiy Niu, Zhigao Thwala, Lungile Nomcebo McCartney, Fiona Simoff, Ivailo Andersson, Ellen Beloqui, Ana Mabondzo, Aloise Robla, Sandra Webb, Dominic-Luc Hellström, Per M. Keita, Åsa V Sima, Eduardo Csaba, Noemi Sundbom, Magnus Preat, Veronique Brayden, David J. Alonso, Maria Jose Artursson, Per ACS Nano [Image: see text] Peptide drugs and biologics provide opportunities for treatments of many diseases. However, due to their poor stability and permeability in the gastrointestinal tract, the oral bioavailability of peptide drugs is negligible. Nanoparticle formulations have been proposed to circumvent these hurdles, but systemic exposure of orally administered peptide drugs has remained elusive. In this study, we investigated the absorption mechanisms of four insulin-loaded arginine-rich nanoparticles displaying differing composition and surface characteristics, developed within the pan-European consortium TRANS-INT. The transport mechanisms and major barriers to nanoparticle permeability were investigated in freshly isolated human jejunal tissue. Cytokine release profiles and standard toxicity markers indicated that the nanoparticles were nontoxic. Three out of four nanoparticles displayed pronounced binding to the mucus layer and did not reach the epithelium. One nanoparticle composed of a mucus inert shell and cell-penetrating octarginine (ENCP), showed significant uptake by the intestinal epithelium corresponding to 28 ± 9% of the administered nanoparticle dose, as determined by super-resolution microscopy. Only a small fraction of nanoparticles taken up by epithelia went on to be transcytosed via a dynamin-dependent process. In situ studies in intact rat jejunal loops confirmed the results from human tissue regarding mucus binding, epithelial uptake, and negligible insulin bioavailability. In conclusion, while none of the four arginine-rich nanoparticles supported systemic insulin delivery, ENCP displayed a consistently high uptake along the intestinal villi. It is proposed that ENCP should be further investigated for local delivery of therapeutics to the intestinal mucosa. American Chemical Society 2022-08-23 2022-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9527806/ /pubmed/35998570 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c04330 Text en © 2022 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 Lundquist, Patrik
Khodus, Georgiy
Niu, Zhigao
Thwala, Lungile Nomcebo
McCartney, Fiona
Simoff, Ivailo
Andersson, Ellen
Beloqui, Ana
Mabondzo, Aloise
Robla, Sandra
Webb, Dominic-Luc
Hellström, Per M.
Keita, Åsa V
Sima, Eduardo
Csaba, Noemi
Sundbom, Magnus
Preat, Veronique
Brayden, David J.
Alonso, Maria Jose
Artursson, Per
Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title_full Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title_fullStr Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title_short Barriers to the Intestinal Absorption of Four Insulin-Loaded Arginine-Rich Nanoparticles in Human and Rat
title_sort barriers to the intestinal absorption of four insulin-loaded arginine-rich nanoparticles in human and rat
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9527806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35998570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c04330
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