Abstract

Nasal drug administration has been identified as a potential alternative to oral drug administration, especially for systemic delivery of large molecular weight compounds. Major advantages of nasal drug delivery include high vascularity and permeability of the epithelial membranes as well as circumvention of first-pass metabolism. RPMI 2650 cell layers (in vitro cell model) and excised sheep nasal mucosal tissues (ex vivo sheep model) were evaluated with regard to epithelial thickness, selected tight junction protein expression (i.e. claudin-1, F-actin chains, zonula occludin-1), extent of p-glycoprotein (P-gp) related efflux of a model compound (Rhodamine-123, R123) and paracellular permeation of a large molecular weight model compound (FITC-dextran 4400, FD4). The cell model grown under liquid cover conditions (LCC) was thinner (24 ± 4 μm) than the epithelial layer of the sheep model (53 ± 4 μm), whereas the thickness of cell model grown under air liquid interface (ALI) conditions (53 ± 8 μm) compared well with that of the sheep model. Although the location and distribution of tight junction proteins and F-actin differed to some extent between the cell model grown under ALI conditions and the sheep model, the extent of paracellular permeation of FD4 was similar (Papp = 0.48 × 10−6 cm.s−1 and 0.46 × 10−6 cm.s−1, respectively). Furthermore, the bi-directional permeation of R123 yielded the same efflux ratio (ER = 2.33) in both models. The permeation results from this exploratory study indicated similarity in terms of compound permeation between the RPMI 2650 nasal epithelial cell line and the excised sheep nasal epithelial tissue model.

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