| Literature DB >> 31614915 |
Cristina Yus1,2,3, Ruben Gracia4,5,6, Ane Larrea7,8,9, Vanesa Andreu10,11, Silvia Irusta12,13,14, Victor Sebastian15,16,17, Gracia Mendoza18,19, Manuel Arruebo20,21,22.
Abstract
The development of advanced probiotic delivery systems, which preserve bacteria from degradation of the gastrointestinal tract and achieve a targeted release mediated by pH-independent swelling, is of great interest to improve the efficient delivery of probiotic bacteria to the target tissue. Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria models (Lactobacillus acidophilus (Moro) Hansen and Mocquot (ATCC® 4356™) and Escherichia coli S17, respectively) have been successfully encapsulated for the first time in pH-independent microparticulate polymethacrylates (i.e., Eudraguard biotic) used for the targeted delivery of nutraceuticals to the colon. These bacteria have also been encapsulated within the mucoadhesive polymethacrylate Eudragit RS 100 widely used as targeted release formulation for active pharmaceutical ingredients. The enteric microparticles remained unaltered under simulated gastric conditions and released the contained viable microbial cargo under simulated intestinal conditions. Buoyancies of 90.2% and 57.3% for Eudragit and Eudraguard microparticles, respectively, and long-term stability (5 months) for the encapsulated microorganisms were found. Cytotoxicity of the microparticles formulated with both polymers was evaluated (0.5-20 mg/mL) on Caco-2 cells, showing high cytocompatibility. These results underline the suitability of the synthesized materials for the successful delivery of probiotic formulations to the target organ, highlighting for the first time the potential use of Eudraguard biotic as an effective enteric coating for the targeted delivery of probiotics.Entities:
Keywords: Eudragit; Eudraguard; enteric coating; polymethacrylate; probiotics; target delivery
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614915 PMCID: PMC6835770 DOI: 10.3390/polym11101668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1SEM photographs showing the morphology of empty microparticles based on: (a,b) Eudragit RS 100; (g,h) Eudraguard biotic; (c) Optical imaging of an Eudragit-based microparticle suspension in water; (d) Optical imaging of the supernatant collected from a Eudragit-based microparticle suspension after 2 h at 37 °C under simulated gastric conditions; (e) Optical imaging of the supernatant collected from a Eudragit-based microparticle suspension after 6 h at 37 °C under simulated intestinal conditions; (f) Size distribution of Eudragit RS 100 microparticles obtained (N = 150); (i) Optical imaging of a Eudraguard-based microparticle suspension in water; (j) Optical imaging of the supernatant collected from a Eudraguard-based microparticle suspension after 2 h at 37 °C under simulated gastric conditions; (k) Optical imaging of the supernatant collected from a Eudraguard-based microparticle suspension after 6 h at 37 °C under simulated intestinal conditions; (l) Size distribution of Eudraguard biotic microparticles obtained (N = 150). Std. Dev. = Standard Deviation.
Figure 2Bacteria viability after polymers, encapsulation media, and synthesis conditions treatment in Escherichia coli (a) and Lactobacillus acidophilus (b). Results were obtained from two independent syntheses assayed in triplicate.
Figure 3SEM micrographs (a–c,e–g) with different magnifications and particle size distribution histograms (d,h) (N = 150) of Eudragit RS 100 (a–d) and Eudraguard (e–h) microparticles loaded with Escherichia coli. Std. Dev. = Standard Deviation.
Figure 4SEM micrographs (a–c,e–g) with different magnifications and particle size distribution histograms (d,h) (N = 150) of Eudragit RS 100 (a–d) and Eudraguard (e–h) microparticles loaded with Lactobacillus acidophilus. Std. Dev. = Standard Deviation.
Figure 5Bacterial count rate after treatment with simulated gastric (SGF) and intestinal (SIF) fluids of coated Escherichia coli (a) and Lactobacillus acidophilus (b).
Figure 6SEM micrographs of Eudragit RS 100 (a–c) and Eudraguard (d–f) microparticles loaded with Escherichia coli and immersed in simulated gastric (a,d) and intestinal fluids (b,c,e,f). White arrows depict the location of bacteria.
Figure 7SEM micrographs of Eudragit RS 100 (a–c) and Eudraguard (d–f) microparticles loaded with Lactobacillus acidophilus and immersed in simulated gastric (a,d) and intestinal fluids (b,c,e,f). White arrows depict the location of bacteria.
Figure 8Cell viability in Caco-2 cells of Eudragit RS 100 (a) and Eudraguard (b) microparticles after incubation for 24 h. Data are presented as mean ± SD (N=4). The black line sets the biocompatibility threshold percentage (70% viability).