Bile Is a Selective Elevator for Mucosal Mechanics and Transport.
Simon HanioStephanie MöllmertConrad MöckelSusobhan ChoudhuryAndreas I HöpfelTheresa ZornSebastian EndresJonas SchlauersbachLena SchellerChristoph KeßlerOliver Scherf-ClavelPeter BellstedtUlrich Sigmar SchubertAnn-Christin PöpplerKatrin G HeinzeJochen GuckLorenz MeinelPublished in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2023)
Mucus mechanically protects the intestinal epithelium and impacts the absorption of drugs, with a largely unknown role for bile. We explored the impacts of bile on mucosal biomechanics and drug transport within mucus. Bile diffused with square-root-of-time kinetics and interplayed with mucus, leading to transient stiffening captured in Brillouin images and a concentration-dependent change from subdiffusive to Brownian-like diffusion kinetics within the mucus demonstrated by differential dynamic microscopy. Bile-interacting drugs, Fluphenazine and Perphenazine, diffused faster through mucus in the presence of bile, while Metoprolol, a drug with no bile interaction, displayed consistent diffusion. Our findings were corroborated by rat studies, where co-dosing of a bile acid sequestrant substantially reduced the bioavailability of Perphenazine but not Metoprolol. We clustered over 50 drugs based on their interactions with bile and mucin. Drugs that interacted with bile also interacted with mucin but not vice versa. This study detailed the dynamics of mucus biomechanics under bile exposure and linked the ability of a drug to interact with bile to its abbility to interact with mucus.