Title | Modulating the Mucosal Drug Delivery Efficiency of Polymeric Nanogels Tuning their Redox Response and Surface Charge |
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ID_Doc | 20057 |
Authors | Udabe, J; Muñoz-Juan, A; Tafech, B; Orellano, MS; Hedtrich, S; Laromaine, A; Calderón, M |
Title | Modulating the Mucosal Drug Delivery Efficiency of Polymeric Nanogels Tuning their Redox Response and Surface Charge |
Year | 2024 |
Published | |
Abstract | Mucus is a hydrated, viscoelastic, and adhesive gel that lubricates and protects the body from pathogens; however, its protective function hinders drug/nanomedicine diffusion and treatment efficiency. Therefore, novel drug delivery strategies are required to overcome challenging mucosal barriers. Here, multi-responsive nanogels (NGs) are developed and explored their interaction with mucus. Specific NG features (e.g., surface charge, temperature responsiveness, and redox response) are evaluated in a typical mucus-associated environment (i.e., mucin proteins and high glutathione concentrations). The results demonstrate that biocompatibility and the capacity to deliver a protein through mucosal barriers in different in vitro and in vivo models highlight the importance of specific NG design elements. Disulfide bonds are highlighted as redox-sensitive cross-linkers within the NG structure as critical for drug delivery performance; they function as degradation points that enable NG degradation and subsequent drug release and anchoring points to adhere to mucin, thereby enhancing their residence time at the desired site of action. Additionally, it is confirmed that surface charges impact interactions with mucin; positively charged NGs exhibit improved interactions with mucin compared to negatively charged and neutral NGs. Overall, the findings underline the importance of redox response and surface charge in NG design for reaching efficient mucosal drug delivery. This study reports the synthesis of various nanogels displaying temperature- and redox-responsive behavior. Disulfide linker-bearing nanogels exhibit biodegradation and enhanced mucoadhesion in reductive conditions, generating covalent bonds with mucin. Disulfide linkers within the nanogel structure and surface charge significantly affect performance in mucosal drug delivery. image |
https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202407044 |
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