Nanoparticles facing the gut barrier: retention or mucosal absorption? Mechanisms and dependency to nanoparticle characteristics

2021 
Abstract A better knowledge on influence of nanomedicine characteristics on their biological efficacy and safety is expected to accelerate their clinical translation. This work aimed understanding of the oral fate of polymer-based nanomedicines designed with different characteristics. The influence of nanoparticle characteristics (size, zeta potential, molecular architecture surface design) was explored on biological responses evaluating their retention and absorption by rat jejunum using the Ussing chamber experimental model. Thermodynamic aspects of interactions between nanoparticles and model mucins were elucidated by isothermal titration calorimetry. The retention on mucosa varied between nanoparticles from 18.5 to 97.3 % of the initial amount after a simulation considering the entire jejunum length. Different mechanisms were proposed which promoted mucosal association or oppositely precluded any interactions. Strikingly, mucosal retention was profoundly affected by the size and nature of interactions with the mucus which depended on the nature of the coating material, but not on the zeta potential. The nanoparticle absorption simulated along the whole length of the intestine was low (0.01 to almost 3% of the initial amounts). A saturable mechanism including an upper nanoparticle size limit was evidenced but, needs now to be further elucidated. This work showed that the molecular design and formulation of nanoparticles can guide mechanisms by which nanoparticles interact with the mucosa. The data could be useful to formulators to address different oral drug delivery challenges ranging from the simple increase of residence time and proximity to the absorptive epithelium and systemic delivery using the most absorbed nanoparticles.
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