4.7 Article

Potential of mucoadhesive chitosan glutamate microparticles as microbicide carriers - antiherpes activity and penetration behavior across the human vaginal epithelium

Journal

DRUG DELIVERY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 2278-2288

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2021.1992037

Keywords

Chitosan glutamate; microbicide vaginal carrier; microparticles; mucoretention; ex vivo penetration studies; human vaginal epithelium; HSV-2; antiviral activity

Funding

  1. Medical University of Bialystok [SUB/2/DN/20/001/2215]
  2. Polish National Science Centre (NCN) [2017/01/X/NZ7/00973]

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The study found that chitosan glutamate spray-dried microparticles displayed feasible mucoadhesive and mucoretention characteristics to human vaginal tissue, but did not facilitate drug penetration across the tissue. The obtained antiviral results demonstrated the potential of chitosan glutamate as an antiherpes adjunctive.
Chitosan glutamate (gCS) spray-dried microparticles appear promising carriers to overcome challenges associated with vaginal microbicide delivery. This study aimed at elucidating the penetration and mucoadhesive behavior of developed gCS multiunit carriers with zidovudine (ZVD) as a model antiretroviral agent in contact with excised human vaginal epithelium followed with an examination of in vitro antiherpes activity in immortal human keratinocytes HaCaT and human vaginal epithelial cells VK2-E6/E7. Both ZVD dispersion and placebo microparticles served as controls. Microparticles displayed feasible (comparable to commercial vaginal product) mucoadhesive and mucoretention characteristics to isolated human vaginal tissue. Ex vivo penetration studies revealed that gCS increased the accumulation of active agent in the vaginal epithelium but surprisingly did not facilitate its penetration across human tissue. Finally, the obtained antiviral results demonstrated the potential of gCS as an antiherpes adjunctive, whose mode of action was related to blocking viral attachment.

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