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1.
Mol Pharm ; 21(7): 3485-3501, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38804275

ABSTRACT

The purpose of our research is to develop functional additives that enhance mucosal absorption of biologics, such as peptide/protein and antibody drugs, to provide their non-to-poor invasive dosage forms self-managed by patients. Our previous in vivo and in vitro studies demonstrated that the intranasal absorption of biologics in mice was significantly improved when coadministered with oligoarginines anchored chemically to hyaluronic acid via a glycine spacer, presumably through syndecan-4-mediated macropinocytosis under activation by oligoarginines. The present mouse experiments first revealed that diglycine-L-tetraarginine-linked hyaluronic acid significantly enhanced the intranasal absorption of sulpiride, which is a poor-absorptive organic compound with a low molecular weight. However, similar enhancement was not observed for levofloxacin, which has a similarly low molecular weight but is a well-absorptive organic compound, probably because its absorption was mostly dominated by passive diffusion. The subsequent monkey experiments revealed that there was no species difference in the absorption-enhancing ability of diglycine-L-tetraarginine-linked hyaluronic acid for not only organic compounds but also biologics. This was presumably because the expression levels of endocytosis-associated membrane proteins on the nasal mucosa in monkeys were almost equivalent to those in mice, and poorly membrane-permeable/membrane-impermeable drugs were mainly absorbed via syndecan-4-mediated macropinocytosis, regardless of animal species. Drug concentrations in the brain assessed in mice and monkeys and those in the cerebral spinal fluids (CSFs) assessed in monkeys indicated that drugs would be delivered from the systemic circulation to the central nervous system by crossing the blood-brain and the blood-CSF barriers under coadministration with the hyaluronic acid derivative. In line with our original hypothesis, this new set of data supported that our oligoarginine-linked hyaluronic acid would locally perform on the mucosal surface and enhance the membrane permeation of drugs under its colocalization.


Subject(s)
Hyaluronic Acid , Animals , Hyaluronic Acid/chemistry , Mice , Male , Administration, Intranasal , Nasal Mucosa/metabolism , Nasal Mucosa/drug effects , Macaca fascicularis , Nasal Absorption/drug effects , Arginine/chemistry
2.
J Org Chem ; 69(19): 6238-43, 2004 Sep 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15357581

ABSTRACT

The reaction of ene-imine with Cp(2)ZrBu(2) was carried out. When a crude imine, which was prepared from ene-aldehyde and primary amine in the presence of MgSO(4), was treated with Cp(2)ZrBu(2) at room temperature overnight, cyclopentane derivative having trans-substituents was obtained in high yield along with a small amount of cyclopentane derivative having cis-substituents. Presumably, cis-zirconacycle is a thermodynamic product. Reactions using various ene-imines were carried out. In the case of ene-imine prepared from ene-aldehyde and (t)BuNH(2), only cyclopentane having cis-substituents was produced. In this reaction, chiral amine was used, and diastereoselective cyclization of ene-imine was carried out. As a result, cyclopentane derivative having cis-substituents was obtained in an optically active form after hydrogenolysis of the cyclized compound.

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