Extensive hepatic metabolism of Selegiline, a selective monoamine oxidase B inhibitor for newly diagnosed Parkinson's disease patients, causes limited brain bioavailability. To improve efficacy, a new generation of flexible lipidic vesicles, Rhamnosomes, comprising alternating lecithin and Rhamnolipid moieties, and decorated with lactoferrin to actively target Selegiline to the brain is proposed.Rhamnosomes were optimized using design of expert, where lipid amount, Soybean lecithin:Rhamnolipid ratio and sonication time were varied. Polyelectrolyte complexation was employed for Lactoferrin conjugation to Rhamnosomes. A pharmacokinetic study in rat plasma and brain was conducted. Optimized Rhamnosomes had a particle size of 107nm, polydispersity index of 0.23, zeta potential of -41mV, entrapment efficiency of 78%, relative deformability of 36sec and ex-vivo skin permeation reaching 60% after 24 hr. The plasma half life of Rhamnosomes was 3.24 times the market product and 2.63 times the intravenous solution, whereas, lactoferrin-conjugated Rhamnosomes exhibited 7 times higher absolute bioavailability than the market product and more than double its brain drug targeting efficiency. Prominent direct nose-to-brain transport values further proved the efficiency of intranasally delivered Selegiline-loaded Lactoferrin conjugated Rhamnosomes to actively target the brain in a non-invasive approach for the treatment of Parkinson's disease.
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