Surface stabilization determines macrophage uptake, cytotoxicity, and bioactivity of curcumin nanocrystals
Language English Country Netherlands Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
    PubMed
          
           36055446
           
          
          
    DOI
          
           10.1016/j.ijpharm.2022.122133
           
          
          
      PII:  S0378-5173(22)00686-X
  
    Knihovny.cz E-resources
    
  
              
      
- MeSH
- Hypromellose Derivatives MeSH
- Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate chemistry MeSH
- Phospholipids MeSH
- Curcumin * chemistry pharmacology MeSH
- Pharmaceutical Preparations MeSH
- Macrophages MeSH
- Nanoparticles * chemistry MeSH
- Poloxamer chemistry MeSH
- Polyethylene Glycols chemistry MeSH
- Polysorbates MeSH
- Solubility MeSH
- Particle Size MeSH
- Water MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Hypromellose Derivatives MeSH
- Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate MeSH
- Phospholipids MeSH
- Curcumin * MeSH
- Pharmaceutical Preparations MeSH
- Poloxamer MeSH
- Polyethylene Glycols MeSH
- Polysorbates MeSH
- Water MeSH
Pharmaceutical nanocrystals represent a promising new formulation that combines the benefits of bulk crystalline materials and colloidal nanoparticles. To be applied in vivo, nanocrystals must meet several criteria, namely colloidal stability in physiological media, non-toxicity to healthy cells, avoidance of macrophage clearance, and bioactivity in the target tissue. In the present work, curcumin, a naturally occurring poorly water-soluble molecule with a broad spectrum of bioactivity has been considered a candidate substance for preparing pharmaceutical nanocrystals. Curcumin nanocrystals in the size range of 40-90 nm were prepared by wet milling using the following combination of steric and ionic stabilizers: Tween 80, sodium dodecyl sulfate, Poloxamer 188, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, phospholipids (with and without polyethylene glycol), and their combination. Nanocrystals stabilized by a combination of phospholipids enriched with polyethylene glycol proved to be the most successful in all evaluated criteria; they were colloidally stable in all media, exhibited low macrophage clearance, and proved non-toxic to healthy cells. This curcumin nanoformulation also exhibited outstanding anticancer potential comparable to commercially used cytostatics (IC50 = 73 µM; 24 h, HT-29 colorectal carcinoma cell line) which represents an improvement of several orders of magnitude when compared to previously studied curcumin formulations. This work shows that the preparation of phospholipid-stabilized nanocrystals allows for the conversion of poorly soluble compounds into a highly effective "solution-like" drug delivery system at pharmaceutically relevant drug concentrations.
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