| Literature DB >> 34959418 |
Nina Katarina Grilc1, Matej Sova2, Julijana Kristl1.
Abstract
Oxidative stress is associated with a wide range of diseases characterised by oxidant-mediated disturbances of various signalling pathways and cellular damage. The only effective strategy for the prevention of cellular damage is to limit the production of oxidants and support their efficient removal. The implication of the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) pathway in the cellular redox status has spurred new interest in the use of its natural modulators (e.g., curcumin, resveratrol). Unfortunately, most natural Nrf2 modulators are poorly soluble and show extensive pre-systemic metabolism, low oral bioavailability, and rapid elimination, which necessitates formulation strategies to circumvent these limitations. This paper provides a brief introduction on the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in Nrf2 modulation and an overview of commonly studied formulations for the improvement of oral bioavailability and in vivo pharmacokinetics of Nrf2 modulators. Some formulations that have also been studied in vivo are discussed, including solid dispersions, self-microemulsifying drug delivery systems, and nanotechnology approaches, such as polymeric and solid lipid nanoparticles, nanocrystals, and micelles. Lastly, brief considerations of nano drug delivery systems for the delivery of Nrf2 modulators to the brain, are provided. The literature reviewed shows that the formulations discussed can provide various improvements to the bioavailability and pharmacokinetics of natural Nrf2 modulators. This has been demonstrated in animal models and clinical studies, thereby increasing the potential for the translation of natural Nrf2 modulators into clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Nrf2 modulator; SMEDDS; curcumin; micelles; nanoparticles; oral bioavailability; oxidative stress; poor solubility; resveratrol; solid dispersions
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959418 PMCID: PMC8708625 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13122137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Schematic presentation of the Nrf2/Keap1 signalling pathway and Nrf2 responses to oxidative stress. Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; Keap1, Kelch ECH-associating protein 1; CuI3, Cullin3; Rbx1, Ring Box1; Ub, ubiquitin; ARE, antioxidant response element; sMaf, small musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma proteins.
Main characteristics of the frequently studied natural Nrf2 modulators for oral delivery. Numbers in parenthesis indicate the relevant references.
| Name | Structure | BCS Classification | Aqueous Solubility (mg/L) | Log P | Mechanism of Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| II | 0.6 [ | 3.92 [ | Nrf2 activation |
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| II | 1.4 [ | 3.04 [ | Nrf2 activation |
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| II | 50.6 [ | 3.22 [ | Nrf2 inhibition |
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| II | 113.0 [ | 3.11 [ | Nrf2 activation |
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| II | 2.2 [ | 1.82 [ | Nrf2 activation |
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| II | 50.0 [ | 3.1 [ | Nrf2 activation |
Figure 2Limitations of natural Nrf2 modulators for oral use and common formulation strategies for mitigation of low oral bioavailability. GI(T), gastrointestinal (tract).
Examples of improved bioavailability of poorly soluble natural Nrf2 modulators achieved using different formulation approaches. Unless otherwise indicated, all pharmacokinetics studies were carried out following enteric modes of administration.
| Natural Nrf2 Modulator | Delivery System | Experimental System | Improvements (Over Non-Formulated Compound) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| TPGS and mannitol-based amorphous | In vivo PKs (rats) | 65-fold AUC, 86-fold cmax increases | [ |
| HPMC-based amorphous | In vivo PKs (rats) | 17.3-fold AUC, 62.8-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| Arabinogalactan-based SD with decreased degree of curcumin crystallinity | In vivo PKs (rats) | 7.85-fold AUC, 4.74 cmax increases | [ | |
|
| Poloxamer 407-based amorphous | Solubility study | Increased solubility | |
| Dissolution test | Increased dissolution rate | [ | ||
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 1.9-fold AUC, 2.2-fold cmax increases | |||
|
| Quercetin Phytosome (lecithin and quercetin complex-based formulation) | In vivo PKs (humans) | 20.1-fold AUC, 20.4-fold cmax increases | [ |
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| Soluplus and poloxamer 407-based | Dissolution test | Increased dissolution rate (Soluplus as optimal excipient) | |
| In vitro permeability (Caco-2 cells) | Increased permeability with poloxamer | [ | ||
| In vivo (rats) | Increase bioavailability | |||
| Formulations based on different polymers: Eudragit E/HCl, Eudragit E PO, PVP K30, PVP VA 64, HPMC 6cp, HPC L-based, tested for dissolution; HPMC, Eudragit E/HCl solid dispersions, tested for PKs in vivo | Dissolution test | Increased dissolution rate, formation of supersaturated resveratrol solution; optimal performance for Eudragit-based solid dispersion | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 4.2-fold AUC, 5.5-fold cmax increases; best performance for Eudragit solid dispersion | |||
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| Formulation with added Eudragit E PO as precipitation inhibitor | In vivo PK (rabbits) | 43.7-fold AUC, 30.7-fold cmax increases | [ |
| Emulsifier OP, Cremorphor EL, PEG and ethyl oleate-based | In vitro dissolution | Increased dissolution rate, solubility | ||
| Ex vivo absorption (rat intestine) | Increased absorption | [ | ||
| In vivo PKs (mice) | Increased bioavailability | |||
| Cremophor RH 40, Transcutol P and ethyl oleate-based | In vivo PKs (rabbits) | 2.9-fold AUC, 2-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| Ethanol, Cremophor RH40 isopropyl myristate-based | Dissolution study | Increased dissolution rate | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (mice) | 12.7-fold AUC, 3.1-fold cmax increases | |||
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| Capryol 90, Cremophor EL, and Tween 20-based SNEDDS | In vivo PKs (rats) | 3.2-fold AUC, 2.3-fold cmax increases | [ |
PKs, pharmacokinetics; AUC, area under the curve; cmax, maximal plasma concentration; SNEDDS, self-nanoemulsifying drug delivery system; TPGS, D-α-tocopheryl polyethene glycol 1000 succinate; HPMC, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose; PVP, polyvinylpyrrolidone; HPC, hydroxypropyl cellulose; PEG, polyethene glycol.
Examples of improved bioavailability of poorly soluble natural Nrf2 modulators achieved using different nanotechnological approaches. Unless otherwise indicated, all pharmacokinetics studies were carried out following enteric modes of administration.
| Natural Nrf2 Modulator | Nano Drug Delivery System | Experimental System | Improvements (Over Non-Formulated Compound) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| PLGA | In vivo PKs (rats) | 15.6-fold AUC, 2.9-fold cmax increases | [ |
| PEG-PLGA | 55-fold AUC, 7.3-fold cmax increases | |||
| PLGA | In vivo PKs (rats) | 26-fold AUC, 7.2-fold cmax increases (adjusted for dose); increased tmax, broader PKs profile, indicating prolonged release | [ | |
| PLGA | In vivo PKs (rats) | 5.6-fold AUC, 4.4-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| G4 PAMAM dendrimer-palmitic acid core-shell | In vivo PK (mice) | 2.1-fold AUC, 2.4-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| In vivo memory and antistress (mice) | Improved efficacy of curcumin in formulation | |||
| Chitosan-pectinate | In vivo PKs (rats) | 4.2-fold AUC, 1.4-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| PLGA | In vitro solubilisation in dispersion of mixed micelles comprised of phosphatidylcholine and bile salts in vitro | Approximately 3-fold higher micelle-mediated solubilisation of NP-encapsulated curcumin compared to free curcumin | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | Increased oral bioavailability (AUC) and cmax | |||
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| Eudragit RL 100 | In PKs (rats) | 7.25-fold AUC, 1.3-fold cmax increases | [ |
| Carboxymethyl chitosan | In vitro release | Increased dissolution rate, increased cumulative percent released drug | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 3.5-fold AUC, 1.2-fold cmax increases | |||
| Galactosylated, non-galactosylated PLGA | In vitro release | Increased dissolution rate | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 3.4-fold AUC, 4.3-fold cmax increases (galactosylated); 1.7-fold AUC, 2.4-fold cmax increases (non-galactosylated) | |||
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| PLGA | In vitro release | Improved release kinetics | [ |
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| Glyceryl behenate | In vivo PKs (rats) | 39.1-fold AUC, 48.9-fold cmax increases | [ |
| Glyceryl behenate | In vivo PKs, biodistrib. (mice, rats) | Increased distribution into the brain | [ | |
| Solid lipid nanoparticles with addition of P-gp inhibitors Brij78 and D-α-tocopheryl poly(ethene glycol) succinate 1000 | In vitro permeability | Increased permeability (Peff) | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 9.54-fold AUC, 3.54-fold cmax increases | |||
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| Glyceryl behenate | In vivo PKs (rats; intraperitoneal) | Increased brain bioavailability | [ |
| N-trimethyl chitosan-g-palmitic acid surface-modified | In vitro release studies | Increased dissolution rate | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 3.8-fold AUC, 1.6-fold cmax increases | |||
| Stearic acid | In vivo PKs (rats) | 8.0-fold AUC, 1.6-fold cmax increases | [ | |
| Apolipoprotein E-surface modified cetyl palmitate | In vitro blood–brain barrier models (hCMEC/D3 cell monolayers) | Enhanced permeability | [ | |
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| Tween 80 micelles | In vivo PKs (humans) | 185-fold AUC, 453-fold cmax increases overall (277-fold and 114-fold AUC, 806-fold and 251-fold cmax increases in women and men, respectively) (mean cmax, 3228 ng/mL) | [ |
| Galactosamine-modified PEG-PLA micelles | In vitro release | Sustained release | [ | |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | Galactosamine modification of micelles increases curcumin bioavailability (cmax/D 5 ng/mL/mg/kg; no quantitative comparison to administration of non-formulated crude curcumin given) | |||
| Solutol HS15 +TPGS, Solutol HS15+Pluronic 127 mixed micelles | In vitro release | Sustained release | [ | |
| In vitro permeability (Caco-2 cells) | Increased permeability, decreased efflux | |||
| In vivo PKs (rats) | 6.2-fold and 5.7-fold AUC, 7.7-fold and 5.6-fold cmax increases (+TPGS, +Pluronic 127, respectively) | |||
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| Pluronic F127 micelles | In vitro release | Sustained release | [ |
| In vivo PKs (rats) | Approx. 5-fold AUC, 4.7-fold cmax increases | |||
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| Tween 80, Tween 20, medium chain triacylgly. mixed micelles | In vivo PKs (humans) | 5.0-fold AUC, 10.6-fold cmax increases | [ |
| Poloxamer 407, TPGS mixed micelles | In vivo PKs (rats) | 2-fold AUC, 2.8- and cmax increases | [ | |
| Poloxamer 407, TPGS mixed micelles, loaded additionally with piperine (absorption enhancer) | 5.7-fold AUC, 5.0-fold cmax increases | |||
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| Sodium taurocholate, Pluronic P123 mixed micelles (12.6% drug loading) | In vivo PKs (rats) | 1.6-fold AUC, 1.8-fold cmax increases | [ |
| Methoxy-PEG-b-PLA | In vivo PKs (rats) | 9-fold AUC, 3.1-fold cmax increases | [ | |
PKs, pharmacokinetics; AUC, area under the curve; cmax, maximal plasma concentration; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PEG, polyethylene glycol; PAMAM, poly (amidoamine); TPGS, d-α-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate; PLA, poly(L-lactic acid).
Comparison of maximum curcumin plasma concentrations (cmax) achieved in animal models after administration of non-formulated and formulated curcumin. All formulations were administered via enteric routes. Unless otherwise stated, all cmax values are normalised with the dose administered.
| Delivery System | cmax/D of Curcumin (ng/mL/mg/kg) | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Formulated | Formulated | ||
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| TPGS and mannitol-based amorphous | 0.09 | 7.77 | [ |
| HPMC-based amorphous | 1.3 | 82.7 | [ |
| Arabinogalactan-based, with decreased curcumin crystallinity | 8.6 | 41 | [ |
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| Ethanol, Cremophor RH40 isopropyl myristate-based | 319 | 983 | [ |
| Cremophor RH 40, Transcutol P and ethyl oleate-based | 80 | 162 | [ |
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| PLGA and PEG-PLGA | 0.081 | 0.24 (PEG); 0.60 (PEG-PLGA) | [ |
| PLGA | 0.36 | 2.6 | [ |
| PLGA | 16 | 68 | [ |
| G4 PAMAM dendrimer-palmitic acid core-shell | 6.0 | 14 | [ |
| Chitosan-pectinate | 70.5 | 100 | [ |
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| Glyceryl behenate | 5.8 | 286 | [ |
| With addition of P-gp inhibitors Brij78, TPGS | 42 | 150 | [ |
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| Tween 80 micelles (evaluated in clinical pharmacokinetics study) | 2.6 ng/mL (average across both genders) | 1189 ng/mL (average across both genders) | [ |
| Galactosamine-modified PEG-PLGA micelles | / | 5.0 | [ |
| Solutol HS15 +TPGS, Solutol HS15+Pluronic 127 mixed micelles | 6.0 | 46 (for more successful TPGS-based formulation) | [ |