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Nanoliposomal minocycline for ocular drug delivery
Authors:James M. Kaiser  Hisanori Imai  Jeremy K. Haakenson  Robert M. Brucklacher  Todd E. Fox  Sriram S. Shanmugavelandy  Kellee A. Unrath  Michelle M. Pedersen  Pingqi Dai  Willard M. Freeman  Sarah K. Bronson  Thomas W. Gardner  Mark Kester
Affiliation:1. Department of Pharmacology, Pennsylvania State College of Medicine, Hummelstown, Pennsylvania, USA;2. Department of Ophthalmology, Pennsylvania State College of Medicine, Hummelstown, Pennsylvania, USA;3. Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Pennsylvania State College of Medicine, Hummelstown, Pennsylvania, USA;4. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Abstract:Nanoliposomal technology is a promising drug delivery system that could be employed to improve the pharmacokinetic properties of clearance and distribution in ocular drug delivery to the retina. We developed a nanoscale version of an anionic, cholesterol-fusing liposome that can encapsulate therapeutic levels of minocycline capable of drug delivery. We demonstrate that size extrusion followed by size-exclusion chromatography can form a stable 80-nm liposome that encapsulates minocycline at a concentration of 450 ± 30 μM, which is 2% to 3% of loading material. More importantly, these nontoxic nanoliposomes can then deliver 40% of encapsulated minocycline to the retina after a subconjunctival injection in the STZ model of diabetes. Efficacy of therapeutic drug delivery was assessed via transcriptomic and proteomic biomarker panels. For both the free minocycline and encapsulated minocycline treatments, proinflammatory markers of diabetes were downregulated at both the messenger RNA and protein levels, validating the utility of biomarker panels for the assessment of ocular drug delivery vehicles.From the Clinical EditorAuthors developed a nano-liposome that can encapsulate minocycline for optimized intraocular drug delivery. These nontoxic nanoliposomes delivered 40% of encapsulated minocycline to the retina after a subconjunctival injection in a diabetes model.
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