| Literature DB >> 34101127 |
Durairaj Thiyagarajan1, Benedikt Huck1,2, Birgit Nothdurft3, Marcus Koch3, David Rudolph4, Mark Rutschmann4, Claus Feldmann4, Constantin Hozsa5,6, Marcus Furch5,7, Karen F W Besecke5, Robert K Gieseler5,8, Brigitta Loretz9, Claus-Michael Lehr1,2.
Abstract
Pulmonary delivery of nanocarriers for novel antimycobacterial compounds is challenging because the aerodynamic properties of nanomaterials are sub-optimal for such purposes. Here, we report the development of dry powder formulations for nanocarriers containing benzothiazinone 043 (BTZ) or levofloxacin (LVX), respectively. The intricacy is to generate dry powder aerosols with adequate aerodynamic properties while maintaining both nanostructural integrity and compound activity until reaching the deeper lung compartments. Microparticles (MPs) were prepared using vibrating mesh spray drying with lactose and leucine as approved excipients for oral inhalation drug products. MP morphologies and sizes were measured using various biophysical techniques including determination of geometric and aerodynamic mean sizes, X-ray diffraction, and confocal and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy. Differences in the nanocarriers' characteristics influenced the MPs' sizes and shapes, their aerodynamic properties, and, hence, also the fraction available for lung deposition. Spay-dried powders of a BTZ nanosuspension, BTZ-loaded silica nanoparticles (NPs), and LVX-loaded liposomes showed promising respirable fractions, in contrast to zirconyl hydrogen phosphate nanocontainers. While the colloidal stability of silica NPs was improved after spray drying, MPs encapsulating either BTZ nanosuspensions or LVX-loaded liposomes showed the highest respirable fractions and active pharmaceutical ingredient loads. Importantly, for the BTZ nanosuspension, biocompatibility and in vitro uptake by a macrophage model cell line were improved even further after spray drying.Entities:
Keywords: Antibacterial nanoparticles; Benzothiazinone; Dry powder formulations; Levofloxacin; Liposomes; Respiratory infections; Tuberculosis
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34101127 PMCID: PMC8236044 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-021-01011-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv Transl Res ISSN: 2190-393X Impact factor: 4.617
Sample designations of NPs and MPs, as well as NP and API contents per 15 mL of spray-drying dispersion. The yield of dry powder formulations was determined by weighting the powder and calculated as percentages of the solid content. The highest API contents were achieved with BTZ-NS-MPs as a combination of both a high API concentration in the nanocarrier and a high particle concentration had been provided in the stock solution. The nanospray dryer uses an electrode for charge-based particle collection. Observed yields in the range of ~ 75–80% are plausible, since the complete collection is impossible due to technical reasons
| NP names and abbreviations | MP name | NP stock solution added [μL] | NP load [mg/g of powder] | API load measured/(theoretical) [mg/g of powder] | MP yield (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | LL-MPs (Lactose-leucine microparticles) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 81 |
| NS-BTZ (nanosuspension-benzothiazinone) | NS-BTZ MPs | 375 | 8.250 | 2.053/(2.983) | 78 |
| SiNP-BTZ (silica nanoparticle-benzothiazinone) | SiNP-BTZ MPs | 1203 | 8.632 | 0.062/(2.718) | 80 |
| ZrNC (zirconyl hydrogen phosphate nanocontainers) | ZrNC MPs | 150 | - | 0/0 | 76 |
| Lip-TS-LVX (TargoSphere liposome-levofloxacin) | Lip-TS-LVX MPs | 150 | 1.019 | 0.724/(1.019) | 83 |
Fig. 1(A) Schematic representation on the production of MPs from NPs suspended in 2.5% lactose + 1% leucine solution. (B) NPs used in this study and their description. (C) Scanning electron micrographs of MPs (scale bar 2 µm). Characterization of MPs by static light scattering (D) and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (E)
Fig. 2(A) Characterization of various MPs by focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (arrows point at the NPs inside the MPs; scale bar 1 µm) and confocal microscopy (scale bar 2 µm). Colloidal properties of the NPs before and after spray drying by measuring their size (B), PDI values (C), and zeta potential (D)
Fig. 3(a) Aerodynamic properties of various MPs studied by next-generation impactor. (b) Analysis of respirable fraction calculated from fine particle fraction (FPF) (insert: empty capsules after completion of the NGI experiments demonstrating the variation in stickiness among the formulations. (c) Powder XRD measurements of the dry powder samples
Fig. 4Cytotoxicity and cell uptake of benzothiazinone 043-loaded nanopharmaceuticals using a macrophage-like cell line. (a) Cytotoxicity measurement of NS-BTZ before and after spray drying (i.e., the dissolved NS-BTZ MP sample) using the MTT cell viability assay. (b) THP-1 uptake of NS-BTZ MPs analyzed by confocal microscopy. Nanosuspensions were labeled with lumogen red (red coloration), actin filaments were stained by Alexa Fluor 488-Phalloidin (green coloration), and nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (blue coloration). Frames of interest (top) have been magnified, tilted, and depicted three-dimensionally (bottom)