Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Intestinal surfactant permeation enhancers and their interaction with enterocyte cell membranes in a mucosal explant system.
Danielsen, E Michael; Hansen, Gert H.
Afiliação
  • Danielsen EM; a Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, The Panum Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences , University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark.
  • Hansen GH; a Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, The Panum Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences , University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark.
Tissue Barriers ; 5(3): e1361900, 2017 07 03.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28837408
ABSTRACT
Intestinal permeation enhancers (PEs) are agents aimed to improve oral delivery of therapeutic drugs with poor bioavailability. The main permeability barrier for oral delivery is the intestinal epithelium, and PEs act to increase the paracellular and/or transcellular passage of drugs. Transcellular passage can be achieved by cell membrane permeabilization and/or by endocytic uptake and subsequent transcytosis. One broad class of PEs is surfactants which act by inserting into the cell membrane, thereby perturbing its integrity, but little is known about how the dynamics of the membrane are affected. In the present work, the interaction of the surfactants lauroyl-L-carnitine, 1-decanoyl-rac-glycerol, and nonaethylene glycol monododecyl ether with the intestinal epithelium was studied in organ cultured pig jejunal mucosal explants. As expected, at 2 mM, these agents rapidly permeabilized the enterocytes for the fluorescent polar tracer lucifer yellow, but surprisingly, they all also blocked both constitutive -and receptor-mediated pathways of endocytosis from the brush border, indicating a complete arrest of apical membrane trafficking. At the ultrastructural level, the PEs caused longitudinal fusion of brush border microvilli. Such a membrane fusogenic activity could also explain the observed formation of vesicle-like structures and large vacuoles along the lateral cell membranes of the enterocytes induced by the PEs. We conclude that the surfactant action of the PEs selected in this study not only permeabilized the enterocytes, but profoundly changed the dynamic properties of their constituent cell membranes.
Assuntos
Palavras-chave

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Tensoativos / Membrana Celular / Permeabilidade da Membrana Celular / Enterócitos / Jejuno Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Tensoativos / Membrana Celular / Permeabilidade da Membrana Celular / Enterócitos / Jejuno Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article