Nejvíce citovaný článek - PubMed ID 31601936
Esters of terpene alcohols as highly potent, reversible, and low toxic skin penetration enhancers
Oleic acid and oleyl alcohol are commonly used permeation and penetration enhancers to facilitate topical drug delivery. Here, we aimed to better understand the mechanism of their enhancing effects in terms of their interactions with the human skin barrier using diclofenac diethylamine (DIC-DEA), a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug for topical pain management. Oleic acid promoted DIC-DEA permeation through ex vivo human skin more rapidly than oleyl alcohol (both applied at 0.75%) due to fluidization of stratum corneum lipids as revealed by infrared spectroscopy. After 12 h, the effect of these enhancers on DIC-DEA permeation leveled off, fluidization was no longer evident, and skin permeabilization was mainly due to the formation of fluid enhancer-rich domains. Contrary to oleyl alcohol, oleic acid adversely affected two indicators of the skin barrier integrity, transepidermal water loss and skin electrical impedance. The content of oleyl alcohol in the stratum corneum was lower than that of oleic acid (even 12 h after the enhancers were removed from the skin surface), but it caused higher DIC-DEA retention in both epidermis and dermis compared to oleic acid. The effects of oleyl alcohol and oleic acid on DIC-DEA permeation and retention in the skin were similar after a single and repeated application (4 doses every 12 h). Thus, oleyl alcohol offers several advantages over oleic acid for topical drug delivery.
- Klíčová slova
- diclofenac, infrared spectroscopy, lipid interactions, penetration enhancer, permeation enhancer, skin barrier, topical drug delivery,
- MeSH
- aplikace kožní MeSH
- kožní absorpce * MeSH
- kůže metabolismus MeSH
- kyselina olejová * farmakologie metabolismus MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- mastné alkoholy metabolismus farmakologie MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- kyselina olejová * MeSH
- mastné alkoholy MeSH
- oleyl alcohol MeSH Prohlížeč
Owing to their complicated pathophysiology, the treatment of skin diseases necessitates a complex approach. Conventional treatment using topical corticosteroids often results in low effectiveness and the incidence of local or even systemic side effects. Nanoformulation of potent anti-inflammatory drugs has been selected as an optimal strategy for enhanced topical delivery of corticosteroids. In order to assess the efficiency of various nanoformulations, we formulated hydrocortisone (HC) and hydrocortisone-17-butyrate (HCB) into three different systems: lipid nanocapsules (LNC), polymeric nanoparticles (PNP), and ethosomes (ETZ). The systems were characterized using dynamic light scattering for their particle size and uniformity and the morphology of nanoparticles was observed by transmission electron microscopy. The nanosystems were tested using ex vivo full thickness porcine and human skin for the delivery of HC and HCB. The skin penetration was observed by confocal microscopy of fluorescently labelled nanosystems. ETZ were proposed as the most effective delivery system for both transdermal and dermal drug targeting but were also found to have a profound effect on the skin barrier with limited restoration. LNC and PNP were found to have significant effects in the dermal delivery of the actives with only minimal transdermal penetration, especially in case of HCB administration.
- Klíčová slova
- PLGA nanoparticles, dermal and transdermal delivery, ethosomes, hydrocortisone, hydrocortisone-17-butyrate, lipid nanocapsules,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Overcoming the skin barrier properties efficiently, temporarily, and safely for successful transdermal drug delivery remains a challenge. We synthesized three series of potential skin permeation enhancers derived from natural amino acid derivatives proline, 4-hydroxyproline, and pyrrolidone carboxylic acid, which is a component of natural moisturizing factor. Permeation studies using in vitro human skin identified dodecyl prolinates with N-acetyl, propionyl, and butyryl chains (Pro2, Pro3, and Pro4, respectively) as potent enhancers for model drugs theophylline and diclofenac. The proline derivatives were generally more active than 4-hydroxyprolines and pyrrolidone carboxylic acid derivatives. Pro2-4 had acceptable in vitro toxicities on 3T3 fibroblast and HaCaT cell lines with IC50 values in tens of µM. Infrared spectroscopy using the human stratum corneum revealed that these enhancers preferentially interacted with the skin barrier lipids and decreased the overall chain order without causing lipid extraction, while their effects on the stratum corneum protein structures were negligible. The impacts of Pro3 and Pro4 on an in vitro transepidermal water loss and skin electrical impedance were fully reversible. Thus, proline derivatives Pro3 and Pro4 have an advantageous combination of high enhancing potency, low cellular toxicity, and reversible action, which is important for their potential in vivo use as the skin barrier would quickly recover after the drug/enhancer administration is terminated.
- MeSH
- aplikace kožní MeSH
- hydroxyprolin metabolismus MeSH
- kožní absorpce * MeSH
- kůže metabolismus MeSH
- kyseliny karboxylové metabolismus MeSH
- léčivé přípravky metabolismus MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- organické látky metabolismus MeSH
- permeabilita MeSH
- prolin * metabolismus MeSH
- pyrrolidinony farmakologie MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- hydroxyprolin MeSH
- kyseliny karboxylové MeSH
- léčivé přípravky MeSH
- organické látky MeSH
- prolin * MeSH
- pyrrolidinony MeSH
Imiquimod (IMQ) is a potent immune response modifier with antiviral and antitumor properties. IMQ's low aqueous solubility and unsatisfactory cutaneous permeability limit its formulation into effective dosage forms. This work aimed to develop IMQ-loaded microemulsions (MEs) based on phospholipids and oleic acid to improve IMQ penetration into the epidermis. A pseudo-ternary phase diagram was constructed, and the microstructure of the formulations was examined by measuring the conductivity values. Selected MEs were characterized and studied for their ability to deliver IMQ into and through ex vivo human skin. ME1 with 1% IMQ (bicontinuous ME with Bingham rheology) delivered similar IMQ quantities to the human epidermis ex vivo as the commercial product while having a 5-fold lower IMQ dose. IMQ was not detected in the acceptor phase after the permeation experiment, suggesting a lower systemic absorption risk than the established product. Infrared spectroscopy of the stratum corneum revealed less ordered and less tightly packed lipids after ME1 application. The ME1-induced barrier disruption recovered within less than 5 h after the formulation removal, as detected by transepidermal water loss measurements. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate that phospholipid and oleic acid-based MEs could become a promising alternative for topical IMQ administration.
- Klíčová slova
- dermal delivery, imiquimod, infrared spectroscopy, microemulsions, oleic acid, transepidermal water loss,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Transdermal drug delivery is an attractive non-invasive method offering numerous advantages over the conventional routes of administration. The main obstacle to drug transport is, however, the powerful skin barrier that needs to be modulated, for example, by transdermal permeation enhancers. Unfortunately, there are still only a few enhancers showing optimum properties including low toxicity and reversibility of enhancing effects. For this reason, we investigated a series of new N-alkylmorpholines with various side chains as potential enhancers in an in vitro permeation study, using three model permeants (theophylline, indomethacin, diclofenac). Moreover, electrical impedance, transepidermal water loss, cellular toxicity and infrared spectroscopy measurements were applied to assess the effect of enhancers on skin integrity, reversibility, toxicity and enhancers' mode of action, respectively. Our results showed a bell-shaped relationship between the enhancing activity and the hydrocarbon chain length of the N-alkylmorpholines, with the most efficient derivatives having 10-14 carbons for both transdermal and dermal delivery. These structures were even more potent than the unsaturated oleyl derivative. The best results were obtained for indomethacin, where particularly the C10-14 derivatives showed significantly stronger effects than the traditional enhancer Azone. Further experiments revealed reversibility in the enhancing effect, acceptable toxicity and a mode of action based predominantly on interactions with stratum corneum lipids.
- Klíčová slova
- dermal and transdermal drug delivery, morpholine derivatives, skin barrier, skin permeation enhancers,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Ceramides (Cer) are essential components of the skin permeability barrier. To probe the role of Cer polar head groups involved in the interfacial hydrogen bonding, the N-lignoceroyl sphingosine polar head was modified by removing the hydroxyls in C-1 (1-deoxy-Cer) or C-3 positions (3-deoxy-Cer) and by N-methylation of amide group (N-Me-Cer). Multilamellar skin lipid models were prepared as equimolar mixtures of Cer, lignoceric acid and cholesterol, with 5 wt% cholesteryl sulfate. In the 1-deoxy-Cer-based models, the lipid species were separated into highly ordered domains (as found by X-ray diffraction and infrared spectroscopy) resulting in similar water loss but 4-5-fold higher permeability to model substances compared to control with natural Cer. In contrast, 3-deoxy-Cer did not change lipid chain order but promoted the formation of a well-organized structure with a 10.8 nm repeat period. Yet both lipid models comprising deoxy-Cer had similar permeabilities to all markers. N-Methylation of Cer decreased lipid chain order, led to phase separation, and improved cholesterol miscibility in the lipid membranes, resulting in 3-fold increased water loss and 10-fold increased permeability to model compounds compared to control. Thus, the C-1 and C-3 hydroxyls and amide group, which are common to all Cer subclasses, considerably affect lipid miscibility and chain order, formation of periodical nanostructures, and permeability of the skin barrier lipid models.
- MeSH
- buněčná membrána metabolismus MeSH
- ceramidy chemie metabolismus MeSH
- kůže metabolismus MeSH
- membrány umělé * MeSH
- permeabilita MeSH
- voda metabolismus MeSH
- změna skupenství MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- ceramidy MeSH
- membrány umělé * MeSH
- voda MeSH