DEFAR - Artigos publicados em periódicos

URI permanente para esta coleçãohttp://www.hml.repositorio.ufop.br/handle/123456789/531

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    Polyester nanocapsules for intravenous delivery of artemether : formulation development, antimalarial efficacy, and cardioprotective effects in vivo.
    (2022) Diniz, Alessandra Teixeira Vidal; Guimarães, Homero Nogueira; Garcia, Giani Martins; Braga, Érika Martins; Richard, Sylvain; Guimarães, Andrea Grabe; Mosqueira, Vanessa Carla Furtado
    Artemether (ATM) is an effective antimalarial drug that also has a short half-life in the blood. Furthermore, ATM is also cardiotoxic and is associated with pro-arrhythmogenic risks. We aimed to develop a delivery system enabling the prolonged release of ATM into the blood coupled with reduced cardiotoxicity. To achieve this, we prepared polymeric nanocapsules (NCs) from different biodegradable polyesters, namely poly(D,L-lactide) (PLA), poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL), and surface-modified NCs, using a monomethoxi-polyethylene glycol-block-poly(D,L-lactide) (PEG5kDa- PLA45kDa) polymer. Using this approach, we were able to encapsulate high yields of ATM (>85%, 0–4 mg/mL) within the oily core of the NCs. The PCL-NCs exhibited the highest percentage of ATM loading as well as a slow release rate. Atomic force microscopy showed nanometric and spherical particles with a narrow size dispersion. We used the PCL NCs loaded with ATM for biological evaluation following IV administration. As with free-ATM, the ATM-PCL-NCs formulation exhibited potent antimalarial efficacy using either the “Four-day test” protocol (ATM total at the end of the 4 daily doses: 40 and 80 mg/kg) in Swiss mice infected with P. berghei or a single low dose (20 mg/kg) of ATM in mice with higher parasitemia (15%). In healthy rats, IV administration of single doses of free-ATM (40 or 80 mg/kg) prolonged cardiac QT and QTc intervals and induced both bradycardia and hypotension. Repeated IV administration of free-ATM (four IV doses at 20 mg/kg every 12 h for 48 h) also prolonged the QT and QTc intervals but, paradoxically, induced tachycardia and hypertension. Remarkably, the incorporation of ATM in ATM-PCL-NCs reduced all adverse effects. In conclusion, the encapsulation of ATM in biodegradable polyester NCs reduces its cardiovascular toxicity without affecting its antimalarial efficacy.
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    IR780-polymer conjugates for stable near-infrared labeling of biodegradable polyester-based nanocarriers.
    (2019) Oliveira, Maria Alice de; Machado, Marina Guimarães Carvalho; Silva, Sabrina Emanuelle Dias; Nascimento, Thais Leite; Lima, Eliana Martins; Lana, Gwenaelle Elza Nathalie Pound; Mosqueira, Vanessa Carla Furtado
    Near-infrared dyes are useful to monitor nanocarriers in vitro and in vivo and can serve as photosensitizers in cancer photodynamic therapy. However, strategies need to be developed to guarantee that the dye photophysical properties and loading within the drug delivery system remain stable for reliable tracking within biological systems. This work reports the facile chemical conjugation of the carbocyanine heptamethine near-infrared dye IR780 to polylactide for stable fluorescent labeling of biodegradable polyester nanocarriers. “Clickable” polylactide was synthesized via organocatalyzed ring opening polymerization of D,L-lactide with a cyclooctyne initiator. IR780 was derivatized and conjugated to polylactide via a one-pot copper-free azide-alkyne cycloaddition reaction. The synthetic strategy developed was effective to promote conjugation of the near-infrared fluorescent dye to polylactide, as confirmed by high performance liquid chromatography. Nanoparticles containing the dye–polymer conjugate were prepared by nanoprecipitation and characterized. Asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation with light scattering and fluorescence detection revealed that the near-infrared fluorescence of the nanoparticles remained stable and was not transferred to serum proteins. In contrast, significant transfer of the dye to serum proteins was evidenced when the dye was merely encapsulated in similar nanoparticles through physical entrapment. Confocal microscopy and fluorescence tomography imaging showed that the polymer-dye conjugate confers fluorescence properties to the NP suitable for further in vitro and in vivo pre-clinical studies.