2008 Annual Meeting
(705b) Production of Virus-Mimetic Mucus-Penetrating Particles for Drug and Gene Delivery In Mucosal Tissues
Authors
Looking to nature for guidance, we noted that pathogens that infect mucosal surfaces have evolved net neutral and hydrophilic surfaces to minimize their adhesion to mucus. We then discovered that even large polymer nanoparticles (up to 500 nm) can rapidly penetrate human mucus through low viscosity "pores" in the human mucus gel, but only if their surfaces are rendered completely non-adhesive to mucus. A critical next step is the identification of safe coating materials that can allow a variety of promising polymer particles to penetrate human mucus.
Here, we describe a simple chemical method, adsorption of Pluronic to either hydrophobic particles or to hydrophobic adhesive regions of human mucus, that readily confers virus-mimetic muco-resistant properties to standard (mucoadhesive) particles. Pluronic is used safely in humans in many products.
Pluronic, an amphiphilic triblock polymer, contains a core polypropylene glycol segment that anchors to the adhesive core of polymeric nanoparticles, coupled with two flanking polyethylene glycol chains that present an uncharged, hydrophilic surface. Pluronic may also shield the adhesive hydrophobic patches along mucin fibers. Both particle coating with Pluronic and simple addition of Pluronic to mucus markedly improves the transport of various polymeric particles in fresh, undiluted human cervicovaginal mucus, with effective diffusivities (Deff) up to only 3-fold reduced compared to those in water. In contrast, the Deff for uncoated particles was ~4000-fold lower in mucus than in water. Much larger fractions of the uncoated particles were immobilized or otherwise hindered by mucus than the Pluronic-coated particles or uncoated particles in Pluronic-treated mucus. We show that this simple chemical method can enhance the transport of a variety of synthetic polymeric particles, offering the prospect that a wide diversity of biomaterials can be adopted for transmucosal therapeutics delivery.