4.7 Article

A Novel Preparation Technique for Human Nasal Respiratory Mucosa to Disclose Its Glycosylation Pattern for Bioadhesive Drug Delivery

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15030973

Keywords

lectins; WGA; mucoadhesion; intranasal drug delivery; glycotargeting

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A reliable method of preparing human nasal mucosa samples and a tool for investigating the carbohydrate building blocks of the respiratory epithelium’s glycocalyx are necessary to study glycotargeting as a potential strategy for nasal drug delivery. By using a simple experimental setup in a 96-well plate format and a panel of six fluorescein-labeled lectins with varying carbohydrate specificities, accessible carbohydrates in the mucosa could be detected and quantified. The experimental setup also allowed for the observation of the uptake of carbohydrate-bound lectin into the cells, and provided hints about the influence of mucus renewal on bioadhesive drug delivery.
To shed some light on glycotargeting as a potential strategy for nasal drug delivery, a reliable preparation method for human nasal mucosa samples and a tool to investigate the carbohydrate building blocks of the glycocalyx of the respiratory epithelium are required. Applying a simple experimental setup in a 96-well plate format together with a panel of six fluorescein-labeled lectins with different carbohydrate specificities allowed for the detection and quantification of accessible carbohydrates in the mucosa. As confirmed by binding experiments at 4 degrees C, both quantitatively by fluorimetry and qualitatively by microscopy, the binding of wheat germ agglutinin exceeded that of the others by 150% on average, indicating a high content of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and sialic acid. Providing energy by raising the temperature to 37 degrees C revealed uptake of the carbohydrate-bound lectin into the cell. Moreover, repeated washing steps during the assay gave a slight hint as to the influence of mucus renewal on bioadhesive drug delivery. All in all, the experimental setup reported here for the first time is not only a suitable approach to estimating the basics and potential of nasal lectin-mediated drug delivery but also meets the needs for answering a broad variety of scientific questions involving the use of ex vivo tissue samples.

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