Affiliations 

  • 1 School of Pharmacy, Shenyang Pharmaceutical University, Shenyang 110016, China
  • 2 Particle Design Research Group, Faculty of Pharmacy, Universiti Teknologi MARA Selangor, Puncak Alam 42300, Malaysia
Asian J Pharm Sci, 2023 Sep;18(5):100848.
PMID: 37881796 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajps.2023.100848

Abstract

Virus-capsid mimicking mucus-permeable nanoparticles are promising oral insulin carriers which surmount intestinal mucus barrier. However, the impact of different virus-capsid mimicking structure remains unexplored. In this study, utilizing biotin grafted chitosan as the main skeleton, virus-mimicking nanoparticles endowed with biologic-shell (streptavidin coverage) and polymeric-shell (hyaluronic acid/alginate coating) were designed with insulin as a model drug by self-assembly processes. It was demonstrated that biologic-shell mimicking nanoparticles exhibited a higher intestinal trans-mucus (>80%, 10 min) and transmucosal penetration efficiency (1.6-2.2-fold improvement) than polymeric-shell counterparts. Uptake mechanism studies revealed caveolae-mediated endocytosis was responsible for the absorption of biologic-shell mimicking nanoparticles whereas polymeric-shell mimicking nanoparticles were characterized by clathrin-mediated pathway with anticipated lysosomal insulin digestion. Further, in vivo hypoglycemic study indicated that the improved effect of regulating blood sugar levels was virus-capsid structure dependent out of which biologic-shell mimicking nanoparticles presented the best performance (5.1%). Although the findings of this study are encouraging, much more work is required to meet the standards of clinical translation. Taken together, we highlight the external structural dependence of virus-capsid mimicking nanoparticles on the muco-penetrating and uptake mechanism of enterocytes that in turn affecting their in vivo absorption, which should be pondered when engineering virus-mimicking nanoparticles for oral insulin delivery.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.