Abstract

The nose-to-brain delivery route is used to bypass the blood–brain barrier and deliver drugs directly into the brain. Over the years, significant signs of progress have been made in developing nano-drug delivery systems to address the very low drug transfer levels seen with conventional formulations (e.g., nasal solutions). In this paper, sericin nanoparticles were prepared using crocetin as a new bioactive natural cross-linker (NPc) and compared to sericin nanoparticles prepared with glutaraldehyde (NPg). The mean diameter of NPc and NPg was about 248 and 225 nm, respectively, and suitable for nose-to-brain delivery. The morphological investigation revealed that NPc are spherical-like particles with a smooth surface, whereas NPg seem small and rough. NPc remained stable at 4 °C for 28 days, and when freeze-dried with 0.1% w/v of trehalose, the aggregation was prevented. The use of crocetin as a natural cross-linker significantly improved the in vitro ROS-scavenging ability of NPc with respect to NPg. Both formulations were cytocompatible at all the concentrations tested on human fibroblasts and Caco-2 cells and protected them against oxidative stress damage. In detail, for NPc, the concentration of 400 µg/mL resulted in the most promising to maintain the cell metabolic activity of fibroblasts higher than 90%. Overall, the results reported in this paper support the employment of NPc as a nose-to-brain drug delivery system, as the brain targeting of antioxidants is a potential tool for the therapy of neurological diseases.

Highlights

  • Significant signs of progress have been made in terms of formulation to address the very low drug transfer levels seen with conventional formulations

  • Sericin was selected as a carrier for the preparation of nanoparticles intended for the nose-to-brain delivery of drugs due to its intrinsic biological properties and excellent biocompatibility, non-immunogenicity and controllable biodegradability [40]

  • The suitability thisbioactive in vitro natural cross‐linker (NPc) and compared to sericin nanoparticles prepared with glutaral‐

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Summary

Introduction

Significant signs of progress have been made in developing nano-drug delivery systems to address the very low drug transfer levels seen with conventional formulations (e.g., nasal solutions). Despite the exact mechanism by which compounds transfer from the nasal mucosa to the brain have to be fully understood yet, the nose-to-brain drug delivery seems to involve an intracellular or extracellular pathway. In the extracellular pathway, the drug directly passes through paracellular spaces across the nasal epithelium directly into the cerebral spinal fluid [5] In both cases, the drug has to reach the olfactory region of the nasal cavity in an appropriate concentration, being retained for a sufficient amount of time, dissolve, and being absorbed.

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