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  • Colon-Targeted Delivery Facilitates the Therapeutic Switching of Sofalcone, a Gastroprotective Agent, to an Anticolitic Drug via Nrf2 Activation.

Colon-Targeted Delivery Facilitates the Therapeutic Switching of Sofalcone, a Gastroprotective Agent, to an Anticolitic Drug via Nrf2 Activation.

Molecular pharmaceutics (2019-08-07)
Wooseong Kim, Soojin Kim, Sanghyun Ju, Hanju Lee, Seongkeun Jeong, Jin-Wook Yoo, In-Soo Yoon, Yunjin Jung
ABSTRACT

We investigated if the therapeutic switching of sofalcone (SFC), a gastroprotective agent, to an anticolitic agent is feasible using colon-targeted drug delivery. SFC can activate the anti-inflammatory nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2)-hemeoxygenase-1 (HO-1) pathway in human colon epithelial cells and murine macrophages. For the efficient treatment of colitis, SFC was coupled with acidic amino acids to yield SFC-aspartic acid (SFC-AA) and SFC-glutamic acid, and their colon targetability and therapeutic effects were assessed as an anticolitic agent in a 2,4-dinitrobenezenesulfonic acid-induced rat colitis model. The SFC derivatives were decoupled up to 72% in the cecal contents but remained stable in the small intestinal contents. Oral gavage of SFC-AA (oral SFC-AA, equivalent to 1.67 mg/kg of SFC) delivered SFC (maximal cecal concentration: 57.36 μM) to the cecum, while no SFC was detected with oral gavage of SFC (oral SFC, 1.67 mg/kg). Moreover, oral SFC-AA (equivalent to 10 mg/kg of SFC) did not afford detectable concentration of SFC in the blood but detected up to 4.64 μM with oral SFC (10 mg/kg), indicating efficient colonic delivery and limited systemic absorption of SFC upon oral SFC-AA. Oral SFC-AA ameliorated colonic damage and inflammation in rat colitis with elevating colonic levels of HO-1 and nuclear Nrf2 protein, and the anticolitic effects of SFC-AA were significantly undermined by an HO-1 inhibitor. At an equivalent dose of SFC, oral SFC-AA but not oral SFC increased colonic HO-1 and nuclear Nrf2 levels, and oral SFC-AA was more effective than oral SFC in treating rat colitis. Moreover, oral SFC-AA was as effective against colitis as oral sulfasalazine being used for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. In conclusion, colon-targeted delivery of SFC facilitated the therapeutic switching of the drug to an anticolitic drug via Nrf2 activation.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
L-Glutamic acid dimethyl ester hydrochloride, ≥99.0% (anhydrous basis material, AT)
Sigma-Aldrich
N-Boc-1,6-hexanediamine, ≥98.0% (NT)