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Orally administered intelligent self-ablating nanoparticles: a new approach to improve drug cellular uptake and intestinal absorption.

Drug Deliv · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers designed a new type of nanoparticle to improve oral delivery of diabetes drugs by overcoming barriers in the gut. The self-ablating nanoparticles showed higher drug encapsulation (77% vs 64%) and better stability than self-assembled nanoparticles. In tests, these nanoparticles were taken up more by cells (1.20 times higher) and had improved blood sugar control compared to the self-assembled version.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDrug Deliv, 2022
Citations16
Relative citation ratio1.67
NIH percentile68
Molecules

Abstract

Oral drug delivery to treat diabetes is being increasingly researched. The mucus and the epithelial cell layers hinder drug delivery. We designed a self-ablating nanoparticle to achieve smart oral delivery to overcome the gastrointestinal barrier. We used the zwitterionic dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine, which exhibits a high affinity toward Oligopeptide transporter 1, to modify poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles and load hemagglutinin-2 peptide to facilitate its escape from lysosomes. Nanoparticles exhibit a core-shell structure, the lipid layer is degraded by the lysosomes when the nanoparticles are captured by lysosomes, then the inner core of the nanoparticles gets exposed. The results revealed that the self-ablating nanoparticles exhibited higher encapsulation ability than the self-assembled nanoparticles (77% vs 64%) and with better stability. Quantitative cellular uptake, cellular uptake mechanisms, and trans-monolayer cellular were studied, and the results revealed that the cellular uptake achieved using the self-ablating nanoparticles was higher than self-assembling nanoparticles, and the number of uptake pathways via which the self-ablating nanoparticles functioned were higher than the self-assembling nanoparticles. Intestinal mucus permeation, intestinal circulation, was studied, and the results revealed that the small self-assembling nanoparticles exhibit a good extent of intestinal uptake in the presence of mucus. flip-flop, intestinal circulation revealed that the uptake of the self-ablating nanoparticles was 1.20 times higher than the self-assembled nanoparticles. Pharmacokinetic study and the pharmacodynamic study showed that the bioavailability and hypoglycemic effect of self-ablating nanoparticles were better than self-assembled nanoparticles.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35037529 ↗