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  4. The Delivery of alpha 1-Antitrypsin Therapy Through Transepidermal Route: Worthwhile to Explore
 
research article

The Delivery of alpha 1-Antitrypsin Therapy Through Transepidermal Route: Worthwhile to Explore

Tumpara, Srinu
•
Martinez-Delgado, Beatriz
•
Gomez-Mariano, Gema
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July 3, 2020
Frontiers In Pharmacology

Human alpha 1-antitrypsin (AAT) is an abundant acute phase glycoprotein expressing anti-protease and immunomodulatory activities, and is used as a biopharmaceutical to treat patients with inherited AAT deficiency. The pleiotropic properties of AAT provide a rationale for using this therapy outside of inherited AAT deficiency. Therapy with AAT is administrated intravenously, yet the alternative routes are being considered. To examine the putative transepidermal application of AAT we used epiCS (R), the 3D human epidermis equivalents reconstructed from human primary epidermal keratinocytes. We topically applied various concentrations of AAT protein with a constant volume of 50 mu l, prepared in Hank's balance solution, HBSS, to epiCS cultured under bas\al condition or when culture medium supplemented with 100 mu g/ml of a combined bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and peptidoglycan (PGN) mixture. AAT freely diffused across epidermis layers in a concentration and time-dependent manner. Within 18 h topically provided 0.2 mg AAT penetrated well the stratum corneum and localizes within the keratinocytes. The treatments with AAT did not induce obvious morphological changes and damages in keratinocyte layers. As expected, LPS/PGN triggered a strong pro-inflammatory activation of epiCS. AAT exhibited a limited capacity to neutralize the effect of LPS/PGN, but more importantly, it lowered expression of IL-18 and IL-8, and preserved levels of filaggrin, a key protein for maintaining the epidermal barrier integrity. Our findings suggest that the transepidermal route for delivering AAT is worthwhile to explore further. If successful, this approach may offer an easy-to-use therapy with AAT for skin inflammatory diseases.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3389/fphar.2020.00983
Web of Science ID

WOS:000553978600001

Author(s)
Tumpara, Srinu
Martinez-Delgado, Beatriz
Gomez-Mariano, Gema
Liu, Bin
DeLuca, David S.
Korenbaum, Elena
Jonigk, Danny
Jugert, Frank
Wurm, Florian M.  
Wurm, Maria J.
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Date Issued

2020-07-03

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA

Published in
Frontiers In Pharmacology
Volume

11

Start page

983

Subjects

Pharmacology & Pharmacy

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alpha1-antitrypin

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inflammation immunomodulation

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epidermis

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topical-skin cream

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rna-seq-rna sequencing

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human epidermal-keratinocytes

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atopic-dermatitis

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in-vitro

•

transdermal delivery

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barrier function

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drug-delivery

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skin barrier

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alpha(1)-antitrypsin

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deficiency

•

expression

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBTC  
LMIS1  
Available on Infoscience
August 13, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/170825
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