| Literature DB >> 28710351 |
Joana Costa-Gouveia1, Elisabetta Pancani2, Samuel Jouny1, Arnaud Machelart1, Vincent Delorme1, Giuseppina Salzano2, Raffaella Iantomasi1, Catherine Piveteau3, Christophe J Queval1, Ok-Ryul Song1, Marion Flipo3, Benoit Deprez3, Jean-Paul Saint-André4, José Hureaux4, Laleh Majlessi5, Nicolas Willand3, Alain Baulard1, Priscille Brodin6, Ruxandra Gref7.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading infectious cause of death worldwide. The use of ethionamide (ETH), a main second line anti-TB drug, is hampered by its severe side effects. Recently discovered "booster" molecules strongly increase the ETH efficacy, opening new perspectives to improve the current clinical outcome of drug-resistant TB. To investigate the simultaneous delivery of ETH and its booster BDM41906 in the lungs, we co-encapsulated these compounds in biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles (NPs), overcoming the bottlenecks inherent to the strong tendency of ETH to crystallize and the limited water solubility of this Booster. The efficacy of the designed formulations was evaluated in TB infected macrophages using an automated confocal high-content screening platform, showing that the drugs maintained their activity after incorporation in NPs. Among tested formulations, "green" β-cyclodextrin (pCD) based NPs displayed the best physico-chemical characteristics and were selected for in vivo studies. The NPs suspension, administered directly into mouse lungs using a Microsprayer®, was proved to be well-tolerated and led to a 3-log decrease of the pulmonary mycobacterial load after 6 administrations as compared to untreated mice. This study paves the way for a future use of pCD NPs for the pulmonary delivery of the [ETH:Booster] pair in TB chemotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28710351 PMCID: PMC5511234 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-05453-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Main characteristics of empty and drug-loaded PLA NPs made of P4 by nanoemulsion.
| Formulation | Size distribution (PCS) | ETH Content | Booster Content | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean diameter (nm ± SE) | PdI | DL (wt% ± SD) | EE (wt% ± SD) | DL (wt% ± SD) | EE (wt% ± SD) | |
| PLA NPs | 254 ± 4 | 0.054 | — | — | — | — |
| PLA NPs [ETH] | 267 ± 3 | 0.074 | 38 ± 2 | 77 ± 5 | — | — |
| PLA NPs [ETH:Booster] | 274 ± 4 | 0.090 | 36 ± 4 | 76 ± 5 | 26 ± 3 | 51 ± 8 |
| PLA NPs [Booster] | 277 ± 5 | 0.075 | — | — | 23 ± 2 | 46 ± 2 |
NPs mean hydrodynamic diameters were determined by PCS and are reported as Mean diameter (Z average nm ± standard error) and Polydispersity Index (PdI). ETH and Booster drug loading (DL) and encapsulation efficiency (EE) were determined by LC-MS-MS and RP-HPLC (the data are mean values ± standard deviation).
Figure 1Chemical structure of PLA NPs components (nanoemulsion technique) and characterization of NPs mean diameter using three independent methods, PCS (number average data), NTA and Cryo-TEM. Typical example of NPs encapsulating [ETH:Booster]. Schematical representation of PLA NPs structure and components. Cryo-TEM allows determining the dry diameter (polymer core), whereas PCS and NTA allow measuring the hydrodynamic diameter (Polymer core + hydrated layer).
Figure 2Nanoparticles made of pCD. (a) Polymerisation of β-CD with epichlorohydrin leading to the formation of cross-linked poly(2-hydroxy-1,3-propylenedioxy)-polycyclodextrin polymer (pCD) and (b) TEM image after freeze fracture of pCD NPs (mean size around 10 nm).
Figure 3Intracellular antitubercular activity. (a) Scheme representing image-based analysis method performed with the image-analysis software Columbus 2.5.1 (PerkinElmer). 1. Input image: cell nuclei and cell cytoplasm were stained with the DNA dye Syto60 and detected in the red channel; M. tuberculosis H37Rv-GFP was detected in the green channel. 2. M. tuberculosis H37Rv-GFP detected in the green channel. 3. Cells detection in the red channel. The estimated cell limit is represented in white. 4. Bacterial area detected inside the cells area is represented in blue. Data related to the area of cells was detected in the red channel and data related to the bacterial area was detected in the green channel. (b) % of inhibition of intracellular bacterial area (black points) and number of cells (grey points) obtained with ETH (solid triangle) and [ETH:Booster] (solid square) in DMSO, PLA NPs and pCD NPs. Data presented corresponds to one representative experiment of three experiments.
Figure 4Extracellular antitubercular activity. % of inhibition on bacterial RFU obtained with ETH (solid triangle) and [ETH:Booster] (solid square) in DMSO, PLA NPs and pCD NPs. Data presented correspond to one representative experiment of three experiments.
Efficiency of the different formulations against M. tuberculosis H37Rv-GFP extracellular or intramacrophage replication.
| Formulation | Extracellular assay | Intracellular assay | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Controls (DMSO) | ETH | 0.30 ± 0.10 | 0.11 ± 0.01 |
| [ETH:Booster] | 0.11 ± 0.06 | 0.06 ± 0.02 | |
| PLA NPs (Nanoemulsion) | PLA::ETH | 0.12 ± 0.04 | 0.09 ± 0.05 |
| PLA::[ETH:Booster] | 0.06 ± 0.02 | 0.04 ± 0.02 | |
| pCD NPs | pCD::ETH | 0.13 ± 0.04 | 0.06 ± 0.01 |
| pCD::[ETH:Booster] | 0.06 ± 0.02 | 0.04 ± 0.01 | |
Results, expressed as concentration of ETH required to inhibit 50% of the bacterial growth in µg/mL (IC50), were calculated by nonlinear regression analysis using the equation for a sigmoidal dose-response curve with variable slope using the GraphPad Prism 5.0 software. Results are shown as the mean ± standard deviation of three independent experiments.
Figure 5Impact of pCDs NPs administration on pulmonary homeostasis in mouse. (a) Protocol. Water (Vehicle) or nanoparticles were administered to mice via the endotracheal route during one (1 week tr.) or two weeks (2 week tr.); ♦ = mice euthanasia. (b) Body weight of mice after each treatment. (c) Analysis of the recruitment of immune cells in the lungs parenchyma by flow cytometry. The data represent the number of selected cells on 500,000 events; To define the different cells populations we used the following phenotypes: neutrophils (CD11b+GR1+), eosinophils (F4/80+SiglecF+), CD4 T cells (CD3+CD4+), alveolar macrophages (CD11c+F4/80+) and dendritic cells (CD11b+CD11c+); the Data are mean values ± standard deviation of one representative experiment of two independent experiments; *p < 0.1, **p < 0.01. (d) After treatment, lungs were analysed by histology (H-E staining, scale bar: 200 μm).
Figure 6Effect of [ETH:Booster] loaded pCD NPs in a mouse model of M. tuberculosis infection. Intranasal infection was performed with M. tuberculosis H37Rv. (a) After 7 days mice were aerosolized endotracheally either with isoniazid (INH, 25 mg/Kg) as positive control or drug loaded nanoparticles (10 mg/Kg) three times during one week. At day 14 post-infection, mice were euthanized and CFU in the lungs were determined. Control: non-treated M. tuberculosis infected mice. Data are mean values ± standard deviation of one representative experiment of three independent experiments; **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. (b–d) After 7 days mice were aerosolized with drug loaded nanoparticles or received drug loaded nanoparticles by gavage six times during two weeks. At day 21 post-infection, mice were euthanized and lung infection was analysed by CFU determination and by histology (H-E staining, scale bar: 2 mm). Control: non-treated M. tuberculosis infected mice. Data are mean values ± standard deviation; *p < 0.1, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.