Effect of paracellular permeation enhancers on intestinal permeability of two peptide drugs, enalaprilat and hexarelin, in rats.
Dahlgren. David D; Olander. Tobias T; Sjöblom. Markus M; Hedeland. Mikael M; Lennernäs. Hans H
Key Findings
- Chitosan (5 mg/mL) and EDTA (1 or 5 mg/mL) increased the lumen‑to‑blood permeability of both hexarelin and enalaprilat in rats.
- The increase in permeability was similar for the larger peptide (hexarelin, 887 Da) and the smaller one, suggesting size isn’t a major barrier for paracellular transport.
- Low‑tonicity (hypotonic) solutions raised the mucosal flux of a marker (51Cr‑EDTA) but did NOT change peptide transport, indicating hypotonicity affects only certain gut regions.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in oral peptide use, co‑administering a paracellular enhancer like chitosan or EDTA could theoretically improve absorption of hexarelin. However, the data are from rat perfusion studies, so human safety, effective doses, and real‑world formulations remain unknown and should be approached with caution.
Summary
In rats, adding the gut‑opening agents chitosan or EDTA to the intestinal lumen made it easier for the peptide hexarelin (and a smaller peptide, enalaprilat) to cross into the bloodstream. This shows that certain “paracellular” enhancers can boost oral absorption of hydrophilic peptides, though the study was done in animals and didn’t test a real oral dosing protocol.
Abstract
Transcellular permeation enhancers are known to increase the intestinal permeability of enalaprilat, a 349 Da peptide, but not hexarelin (887 Da). The primary aim of this paper was to investigate if paracellular permeability enhancers affected the intestinal permeation of the two peptides. This was investigated using the rat single-pass intestinal perfusion model with concomitant blood sampling. These luminal compositions included two paracellular permeation enhancers, chitosan (5 mg/mL) and ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA, 1 and 5 mg/mL), as well as low luminal tonicity (100 mOsm) with or without lidocaine. Effects were evaluated by the change in lumen-to-blood permeability of hexarelin and enalaprilat, and the blood-to-lumen clearance of <sup>51</sup>chromium-labeled EDTA (CL<sub>Cr-EDTA</sub>), a clinical marker for mucosal barrier integrity. The two paracellular permeation enhancers increased the mucosal permeability of both peptide drugs to a similar extent. The data in this study suggests that the potential for paracellular permeability enhancers to increase intestinal absorption of hydrophilic peptides with low molecular mass is greater than for those with transcellular mechanism-of-action. Further, the mucosal blood-to-lumen flux of <sup>51</sup>Cr-EDTA was increased by the two paracellular permeation enhancers and by luminal hypotonicity. In contrast, luminal hypotonicity did not affect the lumen-to-blood transport of enalaprilat and hexarelin. This suggests that hypotonicity affects paracellular solute transport primarily in the mucosal crypt region, as this area is protected from luminal contents by a constant water flow from the crypts.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-01-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.apsb.2020.12.019
23
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