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  • Gemcitabine lipid prodrug nanoparticles: Switching the lipid moiety and changing the fate in the bloodstream.

Gemcitabine lipid prodrug nanoparticles: Switching the lipid moiety and changing the fate in the bloodstream.

International journal of pharmaceutics (2021-09-06)
Eleonore Coppens, Didier Desmaële, Timothée Naret, Sébastien Garcia-Argote, Sophie Feuillastre, Grégory Pieters, Catherine Cailleau, Jean-Louis Paul, Bastien Prost, Audrey Solgadi, Jean-Philippe Michel, Magali Noiray, Patrick Couvreur, Simona Mura
ABSTRACT

A simple approach to achieve a lipoprotein (LP)-mediated drug delivery is to trigger the spontaneous drug insertion into endogenous lipoproteins in the bloodstream, by means of its chemical modification. Nanoparticles (NPs) made of the squalene-gemcitabine (SQGem) conjugate were found to have a high affinity for plasma lipoproteins while free gemcitabine did not, suggesting a key role of the lipid moiety in this event. Whether the drug conjugation to cholesterol, one of the major lipoprotein-transported lipids, could also promote an analogous interaction was a matter of question. NPs made of the cholesterol-gemcitabine conjugate (CholGem) have been herein thoroughly investigated for their blood distribution profile both in vitro and in vivo. Unexpectedly, contrarily to SQGem, no trace of the CholGem prodrug could be found in the lipoprotein fractions, nor was it interacting with albumin. The investigation of isolated NPs and NPs/LPs physical mixtures provided a further insight into the lack of interaction of CholGem NPs with LPs. Although essential for allowing the self-assembly of the prodrug into nanoparticles, the lipid moiety may not be sufficient to elicit interaction of the conjugated drug with plasma lipoproteins but the whole NP physicochemical features must be carefully considered.