Transdermal Delivery of Donepezil Niosomes For Alzheimer's Disease: Synthesis, Ex Vivo Permeation And Brain Targeting Studies.
Date
2022
Authors
.Archana
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The present investigation aims to encapsulate donepezil (DNP) in niosomes to avert the
side effects and deliver the drug to the brain bypassing the skin barrier. The finding
conclusively demonstrated that entrapment efficiency and the alteration in the niosome
size are associated with the change in the span 60: cholesterol ratio, sonication, hydration
volume, and Solulan C24. The optimization process resulted in the formation of stable
niosomes of 180.1 ± 1.83 nm entrapping 82.15% ± 1.54% of the drug.
The cryo-SEM image and in vitro drug release profile revealed that the optimized
niosome is pH-sensitive, and the niosomes undergo membrane destabilization at acidic
skin pH. The MN-assisted studies with MN1200 showed a 26-fold increase in
transdermal permeation of DNP against the passive method in porcine skin at a steady
flux rate of 9.89 ± 0.923 μg/cm2/h. Therefore, it may be inferred that delivering the intact
DNP niosomes using MNs across the skin is feasible by a relatively painless and non-
invasive method, thereby improving patient compliance.
The specificity of a niosome for brain cells was improved by functionalizing the
niosomes with NPG, a glucose analog molecule. The molecular docking computational
studies identified the interacting amino acids between the NPG ligand and active site,
4PYP of the GLUT-1 transporter protein. In addition, the cell viability studies by AO-EB
staining and cell uptake studies by the iron perls staining method presented visual
evidence for non-toxicity and internalization of the niosomes.
The in vivo studies on AD-induced SD rats demonstrated excellent localization and
sustained release of DNP from NPG-fn-niosome by three folds. The results confirmed the
actual effectiveness of NPG functionalization and site-directed delivery. However,
further preclinical studies are recommended to confirm the efficacy of the engineered
drug delivery system.
Description
Keywords
pH-sensitive DNP niosome, Kinetic modeling, Microneedle-assisted transpermeation, NPG functionalization, Molecular docking, In vivo studies