Oral hydrogel nanoemulsion co-delivery system treats inflammatory bowel disease via anti-inflammatory and promoting intestinal mucosa repair.

J Nanobiotechnology

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Southwest Medical University, 1-1 Xianglin Road, Luzhou, 646000, Sichuan, People's Republic of China.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Oral nano-delivery systems struggle to deliver drugs effectively to the colon for treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), highlighting the need for improved methods that can respond to the specific microenvironment of the gut.
  • This study successfully developed a pH-responsive sodium alginate hydrogel-coated nanoemulsion (CUR/EMO NE@SA) that co-delivers curcumin and emodin, offering controlled drug release and targeted action against macrophages in the inflamed colon.
  • The CUR/EMO NE@SA formulation showed significant reductions in pro-inflammatory markers and enhanced mucosal repair, suggesting a new therapeutic approach for IBD by combining anti-inflammatory and mucosal restoration effects in a targeted manner.

Article Abstract

Background: Due to oral nano-delivery systems for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are often failed to accumulated to the colonic site and could not achieve controlled drug release, it's urgent to develop a microenvironment responsive drug delivery to improve therapy efficacy. Inflammation at the IBD site is mainly mediated by macrophages, which are the key effector cells. Excessive inflammation leads to oxidative stress and intestinal mucosal damage. The use of curcumin (CUR) and emodin (EMO) together for the treatment of IBD is promising due to their respective anti-inflammatory and intestinal mucosal repair effects. In view of the pH gradient environment of gastrointestinal tract, here we prepared pH-responsive sodium alginate (SA) hydrogel-coated nanoemulsions to co-deliver CUR and EMO (CUR/EMO NE@SA) to achieve controlled drug release and specifically target macrophages of the colon.

Results: In this study, a pH-responsive CUR/EMO NE@SA was successfully developed, in which the CUR/EMO NE was loaded by chitosan and further crosslinked with sodium alginate. CUR/EMO NE@SA had a pH-responsive property and could achieve controlled drug release in the colon. The preparation could significantly alleviate and improve the colon inflammatory microenvironment by decreasing TNF-α and IL-6 expression, increasing IL-10 expression, scavenging reactive oxygen species in macrophages, and by ameliorating the restoration of intestinal mucosal tight junction protein expression. Furthermore, we revealed the molecular mechanism of the preparation for IBD treatment, which might due to the CUR and EMO synergic inhibition of NF-κB to improve the pro-inflammatory microenvironment. Our study provides a new IBD therapy strategy via synergically inhibiting inflammatory, repairing mucosal and clearing ROS by pH-sensitive hydrogel-encapsulated nanoemulsion drug delivery system, which might be developed for other chronic inflammatory disease treatment.

Conclusions: It's suggested that pH-sensitive hydrogel-coated nanoemulsion-based codelivery systems are a promising combinatorial platform in IBD.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10436423PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-023-02045-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

achieve controlled
12
controlled drug
12
drug release
12
intestinal mucosal
12
cur/emo ne@sa
12
inflammatory bowel
8
bowel disease
8
drug delivery
8
sodium alginate
8
cur emo
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!