Peroral administration of tacrine, the first acetylcholinestearse inhibitor licensed for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, is associated with low bioavailability, due to an extended first-pass methabolism, short elimination half-life and hepatotoxicity. Nasal drug delivery may reduce the degree of these problems. Tacrine hydrochloride nasal delivery is here investigated by means of albumin nanoparticles carrying beta cyclodextrin and two different beta cyclodextrin derivatives (hydroxypropyl beta cyclodextrin and sulphobutylether beta cyclodextrin). Bovine serum albumin nanoparticles were obtained using a coacervation method, followed by thermal cross-linking, starting from protein solution at alkaline pH. After preparation, nanoparticles were loaded by soaking from solutions of tacrine hydrochloride and lyophilised. Thermal analysis (differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis) supported by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy were performed in order to confirm protein crosslinking in nanosphere structure and possible drug/carrier interaction occurred after the loading process. Moreover, size, polydispersity, zeta potential and morphology of the nanoparticles were investigated as well as drug loading, mucoadhesion properties and ex-vivo drug permeation ability. Results indicate that all the nanoparticles presented a mean size and a polydispersity lower than 300 nm and 0.33 nm, respectively, were spherical shaped and negatively charged even after drug loading. Moreover, the presence of the different beta cyclodextrins in the polymeric network affected drug loading and could differently modulate nanoparticle mucoadhesiveness and drug permeation behaviour.

Albumin nanoparticles carrying cyclodextrins for nasal deliveryof the anti-Alzheimer drug tacrine

SORRENTI, MILENA LILLINA;CATENACCI, LAURA;
2011-01-01

Abstract

Peroral administration of tacrine, the first acetylcholinestearse inhibitor licensed for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, is associated with low bioavailability, due to an extended first-pass methabolism, short elimination half-life and hepatotoxicity. Nasal drug delivery may reduce the degree of these problems. Tacrine hydrochloride nasal delivery is here investigated by means of albumin nanoparticles carrying beta cyclodextrin and two different beta cyclodextrin derivatives (hydroxypropyl beta cyclodextrin and sulphobutylether beta cyclodextrin). Bovine serum albumin nanoparticles were obtained using a coacervation method, followed by thermal cross-linking, starting from protein solution at alkaline pH. After preparation, nanoparticles were loaded by soaking from solutions of tacrine hydrochloride and lyophilised. Thermal analysis (differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis) supported by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy were performed in order to confirm protein crosslinking in nanosphere structure and possible drug/carrier interaction occurred after the loading process. Moreover, size, polydispersity, zeta potential and morphology of the nanoparticles were investigated as well as drug loading, mucoadhesion properties and ex-vivo drug permeation ability. Results indicate that all the nanoparticles presented a mean size and a polydispersity lower than 300 nm and 0.33 nm, respectively, were spherical shaped and negatively charged even after drug loading. Moreover, the presence of the different beta cyclodextrins in the polymeric network affected drug loading and could differently modulate nanoparticle mucoadhesiveness and drug permeation behaviour.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/322709
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