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The effect of sucrose esters on a culture model of the nasal barrier.

Toxicology in vitro : an international journal published in association with BIBRA (2012-01-26)
Levente Kürti, Szilvia Veszelka, Alexandra Bocsik, Ngo Thi Khue Dung, Béla Ozsvári, László G Puskás, Agnes Kittel, Piroska Szabó-Révész, Mária A Deli
RESUMEN

Sucrose esters are effective solubilizers and there is an interest to use them as pharmaceutical excipients for nasal drug delivery. We have determined for the first time the non-toxic doses of laurate and myristate sucrose esters by four independent methods, and their effects on epithelial permeability using RPMI 2650 human nasal epithelial cell line. Based on real-time cell electronic sensing, MTT dye conversion and lactate dehydrogenase release methods reference surfactant Cremophor RH40 proved to be the least toxic excipient, and could be used at 5mg/mL concentration for 1h in epithelial cells without cellular damage. The non-toxic dose of Tween 80 was 1 mg/mL, while the dose of laurate and myristate sucrose esters that could be safely used on cells for 1 h was 0.1 mg/mL. Both the reference surfactants and the sucrose esters significantly enhanced the permeability of epithelial cell layers for the paracellular marker FITC-labelled 4.4 kDa dextran at 0.1 mg/mL concentration. The effects of sucrose esters on epithelial permeability were dose-dependent. These data indicate that laurate and myristate sucrose esters can be potentially used as permeability enhancers in nasal formulations to augment drug delivery to the systemic circulation.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Sucrose monolaurate, BioXtra, ≥97.0% (TLC)