Cytotoxicity, Dermal Toxicity, and In Vivo Antifungal Effect of Griseofulvin-Loaded Vaterite Carriers Administered via Sonophoresis.
Roman A VerkhovskiiAnastasiia A KozlovaEkaterina V LengertMariia S SavelevaMikhail A MakarkinArtem M MylnikovNikita A NavolokinAlla B BucharskayaGeorgy S TerentyukIlya A BosakNatalya V VasilyevaYulia S SvenskayaPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2023)
The search for novel therapeutic strategies to treat fungal diseases is of special importance nowadays given the emerging threat of drug resistance. Various particulate delivery systems are extensively being developing to enhance bioavailability, site-specific penetration, and therapeutic efficacy of antimycotics. Recently, we have designed a novel topical formulation for griseofulvin (Gf) drug, which is currently commercially available in oral dosage forms due to its limited skin permeation. The proposed formulation is based on vaterite carriers that enabled effective incorporation and ultrasonically assisted delivery of Gf to hair follicles improving its dermal bioavailability. Here, we evaluated the effect of ultrasound on the viability of murine fibroblasts co-incubated with either Gf-loaded carriers or a free form of Gf and investigated the influence of both forms on different subpopulations of murine blood cells. The study revealed no sufficient cyto- and hemotoxicity of the carriers, even at the highest investigated concentrations. We also conducted a series of in vivo experiments to assess their multi-dose dermal toxicity and antifungal efficiency. Visual and histological examinations of the skin in healthy rabbits showed no obvious adverse effects after US-assisted application of the Gf-loaded carriers. At the same time, investigation of therapeutic efficiency for the designed formulation in comparison with free Gf and isoconazole drugs in a guinea pig model of trichophytosis revealed that the vaterite-based form of Gf provided the most rapid and effective cure of infected animals together with the reduction in therapeutic procedure number. These findings pave the way to improving antifungal therapy of superficial mycoses and justifying further preclinical studies.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- drug delivery
- candida albicans
- cancer therapy
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stem cells
- soft tissue
- multidrug resistant
- atomic force microscopy
- bone marrow
- emergency department
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell proliferation
- cell therapy
- extracellular matrix
- cell cycle arrest
- replacement therapy
- contrast enhanced ultrasound