| Literature DB >> 22366598 |
Leticia H Higa1, Priscila Schilrreff, Ana Paula Perez, Maiara A Iriarte, Diana I Roncaglia, Maria Jose Morilla, Eder L Romero.
Abstract
Ultradeformable archaeosomes (UDA) are vesicles made of soybean phosphatidylcholine (SPC), sodium cholate (NaChol) and polar lipids from Halorubrum tebenquichense (3:1:3 wt/wt). Although ultradeformable liposomes (UDL, made of SPC and NaChol at 6:1 wt/wt) and UDA were neither captured nor caused cytotoxicity on keratinocytes, UDA was avidly captured by macrophages, their viability being reduced by 0.4-1.6 mg/mL phospholipids by 25 to 60%. Instead, UDL were poorly captured and caused no toxicity. Balb/C mice immunized by the topical route with four doses of ovalbumin (OVA)-loaded UDA, at 75 μg OVA/600 μg phospholipids (125 nm mean size and -42 mV zeta potential), induced IgG titers tenfold to 100-fold higher than those immunized with OVA-loaded UDL at the same dosage. Both matrices penetrate to the same skin depth (nearly 10 μm after 1 hour on excised human skin), being the higher topical adjuvancy and higher phagocytic uptake of UDA related to its glycolipid content. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR: This work summarizes key findings related to the development of ultradeformable archaeosomes as vehicles utilized in transdermal delivery systems with improved skin penetration.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22366598 DOI: 10.1016/j.nano.2012.02.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomedicine ISSN: 1549-9634 Impact factor: 5.307