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

Author(s)
Sladek, Svenja  
McCartney, Fiona  
Eskander, Mena  
Brayden, David James  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/11785
Date Issued
2020-03-12
Date Available
2020-12-08T10:57:15Z
Abstract
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.
Sponsorship
European Commission - Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
MDPI
Journal
Pharmaceutics
Volume
12
Issue
3
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 the Authors
Subjects

Bioengineering

Nanotechnology

Insulin

Hyaluronic acid

Chitosan

Oral peptide delivery...

Intestinal permeation...

Nanomedicine

DOI
10.3390/pharmaceutics12030259
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1999-4923
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
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Name

pharmaceutics-12-00259-v2 (1).pdf

Size

8.26 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

bc3df7d84f725c4661159ea293177f31

Owning collection
Veterinary Medicine Research Collection
Mapped collections
Conway Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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