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The basement membrane separates the epithelium from the stroma of any given barrier tissue and is essential in regulating cellular behavior, as mechanical barrier and as structural support. It further plays an important role for new tissue formation, homeostasis, and pathological processes, such as diabetes or cancer. Breakdown of the basement membrane is believed to be essential for tumor invasion and metastasization. Since the basement membrane is crucial for many body functions, the development of artificial basement membranes is indispensable for the ultimate formation of engineered functional tissue, however, challenging due to their complex structure.
Electrospinning enables the production of fibers in the nano- or microscale range with morphological similarities to the randomly orientated collagen and elastic fibers in the basement membrane. However, electrospun fibers often lack the functional similarity to guide cells and maintain tissue-specific functions. Hence, their possible applications as matrix structure for tissue engineering are limited.
Herein, the potential of polyester meshes, modified with six armed star-shaped pre-polymers and cell-adhesion-mediating peptides, was evaluated to act as functional isotropic and bipolar artificial basement membranes. Thereby, the meshes were shown to be biocompatible and stable including under dynamic conditions, and the degradation profile to correlate with the rate of new tissue formation. The different peptide sequences did not influence the morphology and integrity of the fibers. The modified membranes exhibited protein-repellent properties over 12 months, indicating the long-term stability of the cross-linked star-polymer surfaces.
Cell culture experiments with primary fibroblasts and a human keratinocyte cell line (HaCaT) revealed that cell adhesion and growth strongly depends on the peptide sequences and their combinations employed. HaCaT cells grew to confluence on membranes modified with a combination of laminin/collagen type IV derived binding sequences and with a combination of fibronectin/laminin/collagen type IV derived peptide sequences. Fibroblasts strongly adhered to the fibronectin derived binding sequence and to membranes containing a combination of fibronectin/laminin/collagen type IV derived peptide sequences. The adhesion and growth of fibroblasts and HaCaT cells were significantly reduced on membranes modified with laminin, as well as collagen IV derived peptide sequences. HaCaT cells and fibroblasts barely adhered onto meshes without peptide sequences.
Co-culture experiments at the air-liquid interface with fibroblasts and HaCaT cells confirmed the possibility of creating biocompatible, biofunctional and biomimetic isotropic and bipolar basement membranes, based on the functionalized fibers. HaCaT cells grew in several layers, differentiating towards the surface and expressing cytokeratin 10 in the suprabasal and cytokeratin 14 in the basal layers. Migration of fibroblasts into the electrospun membrane was shown by vimentin staining. Moreover, specific staining against laminin type V, collagen type I, III, IV and fibronectin illustrated that cells started to remodel the electrospun membrane and produced new extracellular matrix proteins following the adhesion to the synthetic surface structures.
The culturing of primary human skin keratinocytes proved to be difficult on electrospun fibers. Cells attached to the membrane, but failed to form a multilayered, well-stratified, and keratinized epidermal layer. Changing the fiber composition and fixation methods did not promote tissue development. Further investigations of the membrane demonstrated the tremendous influence of the pore size of the membrane on epithelial formation. Furthermore, primary keratinocytes reacted more sensitive to pH changes in the medium than HaCaT cells did.
Since primary keratinocytes did not adequately develop on the functionalized meshes, polycarbonate membranes were used instead of electrospun meshes to establish oral mucosa models. The tissue-engineered models represented important features of native human oral mucosa. They consisted of a multilayered epithelium with stratum basale, stratum spinosum, stratum granulosum, and stratum corneum. The models formed a physical barrier and the expression of characteristic cell markers was comparable with that in native human oral mucosa. The results from the ET-50 assay and the irritation study reflected the reproducibility of the tissue equivalents.
Altogether, electrospinning enables the production of fibers with structural similarity to the basement membrane. Incorporating extracellular matrix components to mimic the functional composition offers a safe and promising way to modify the fibers so that they can be used for different tissue engineering applications. The resultant biomimetic membranes that can be functionalized with binding sequences derived from widely varying proteins can be used as a toolbox to study the influence of isotropic and bipolar basement membranes on tissue formation and matrix remodeling systematically, with regards to the biochemical composition and the influence and importance of mono- and co-culture. The oral mucosa models may be useful for toxicity and permeation studies, to monitor the irritation potential of oral health care products and biomaterials or as a disease model.
Drug delivery of therapeutic gases – strategies for controlled and local delivery of carbon monoxide
(2017)
The isoenzyme heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) is a key element for maintaining cellular homeostasis. Upregulated in response to cellular stress, the HO-1 degrades heme into carbon monoxide (CO), biliverdin, and Fe2+. By means of a local cell-protective feedback loop the enzyme triggers numerous effects including anti-oxidative, anti-apoptotic, and anti-inflammatory events associated with complex signalling patterns which are largely orchestrated by CO. Various approaches to mimic this physiological HO-1 / CO system aiming for a treatment of medical conditions have been described [1]. These preclinical studies commonly applied CO systemically via (i) inhalation or (ii) using CO-Releasing Molecules (CORMs) [2]. The clinical use of these approaches, however, is challenged by a lack of practicability and substantial safety issues associated with the toxicity of high systemic doses of CO that are required for triggering therapeutic effects. Therefore, one rational of this thesis is to describe and evaluate strategies for the local delivery of CO aiming for safe and effective CO therapeutics of tomorrow.
Successful formulation development of novel, particularly organic APIs of low molecular weight as candidates for ground-breaking pharmaceutical products is a major challenge for the pharmaceutical industry because of the poor aqueous solubility of most of these compounds.
The hit identification strategies of drug development in use today apply high throughput screening techniques for the investigation of thousands of substances. This approach led to a systematical increase in molecular weight and lipophilicity and a decrease of water solubility of lead compounds reaching market access.
The high lipophilicity causes an excellent permeability of the compounds which favours the absorption process from the small intestine, but it causes a decrease of water-solubility. It becomes evident that an adequate aqueous solubility is necessary for absorption of the API from the gastrointestinal fluids into the systemic circulation and hence for efficacy of the pharmaceutical product. Only an dissolved API is getting absorbed and becomes efficacious. The precipitated proportion is resigned directly. Therefore, the development of an individual formulation aligning the physicochemical characteristics is necessary for every API to produce supersaturated solutions in the small intestine and to reach an adequate bioavailability after absorption into the systemic circulation.
In this thesis a specific formulation development was investigated for two exemplary poorly water-soluble APIs to replace the empirical approach often used today. The basic tyrosine-kinase inhibitor imatinib and six different acetylated amino acids were transferred into ILs. As compared to the free base and the mesylate salt, which is marketed by Novartis AG as Gleevec®, the dissolution rate as well as the supersaturation time was increased significantly. By changing the mesylate anion with its potential genotoxic risks, the total toxicity of the drug product could be decreased. The amorphous ILs proved adequate stability under forcing conditions and there was no recrystallization of the free base observed. The amorphous character of the ILs caused an increased amount of water vapour sorption which can be compensated by special packaging materials. Taken together, the presentation of imatinib as an IL is intended for oral administration as a tablet and can cause a reduction of dose because of the increased solubility. Therefore, the occurrence of side effects can be reduced as compared to Gleevec®. If there is actually an increased bioavailability to observe, has to be proved by the execution of animal trials.
The novel NOX inhibitor VAS3947 is intended for the treatment of endothelial dysfunctions causing diseases like heart failure and stroke. The compounds poor aqueous solubility hindered further clinical development so far and make the drug candidate to remain in a very early stage of the drug development process. Therefore, different formulation concepts were evaluated in this study:
An amorphous solid dispersion prepared from VAS3947 and Eudragit® L100 by means of spray drying was able to increase the dissolution rate and solubility of the compound significantly, but with the accomplished kinetic solubility being in the low µM range it is not possible to reach therapeutic plasma concentrations.
In contrast, the incorporation into cyclodextrins resulted in an 760-fold increased solubility. Different cyclodextrins were evaluated. Especially the lipophilic derivatives of the β-cyclodextrin showed to be the most adequate excipients. The incorporation of the API into the cyclodextrin cavity was proved by means of NMR spectroscopy. Additionally, a formulation of VAS3947 and hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin was prepared. This formulation is intended for the intravenous application during animal trials, which have to be conducted to get to know the pharmacokinetics of VAS3947. This formulation reached a concentration of 1 mg/mL spending striking protection of VAS3947 against degradation.
Presentation of VAS3947 as a microemulsion system led also to increase the aqueous solubility of the compound, but not in the same extent as the cyclodextrin formulation. Beside the formulation development a physicochemical characterization was performed to get to know important parameters such as log P and pKa values of VAS3947. An HPLC method was developed and validated to analyse the extent of solubility improvement.
A major issue of the compound VAS3947 and all related triazolopyrimidine derivatives, developed by Vasopharm GmbH, is the insufficient chemical stability because of presence of a hemiaminal moiety in the chemical structure. Stability investigations and an extensive biopharmaceutical characterization confirm the hindering of further clinical development by insufficient drug stability and high cytotoxicity. Poor aqueous solubility is an additional disadvantage which can be handled by a concerted formulation development.