posted on 2020-02-07, 20:33authored byAnja Traeger, Susanna Voelker, Blerina Shkodra-Pula, Christian Kretzer, Stephanie Schubert, Michael Gottschaldt, Ulrich S. Schubert, Oliver Werz
Hyperforin,
a highly hydrophobic prenylated acylphloroglucinol
from the medical plant St. John’s Wort, possesses anti-inflammatory
properties and suppresses the formation of proinflammatory leukotrienes
by inhibiting the key enzyme 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO). Despite its strong
effectiveness and the unique molecular mode of interference with 5-LO,
the high lipophilicity of hyperforin hampers its efficacy in vivo
and, thus, impairs its therapeutic value, especially because of poor
water solubility and strong plasma (albumin) protein binding. To overcome
these hurdles that actually apply to many other hydrophobic 5-LO inhibitors,
we have encapsulated hyperforin into nanoparticles (NPs) consisting
of acetalated dextran (AcDex) to avoid plasma protein binding and
thus improve its cellular supply under physiologically relevant conditions.
Encapsulated hyperforin potently suppressed 5-LO activity in human
neutrophils, but it failed to interfere with 5-LO activity in a cell-free
assay, as expected. In the presence of human serum albumin (HSA),
hyperforin was unable to inhibit cellular 5-LO activity, seemingly
because of strong albumin binding. However, when encapsulated into
NPs, hyperforin caused strong inhibition of 5-LO activity in the presence
of HSA. Together, encapsulation of the highly hydrophobic hyperforin
as a representative of lipophilic 5-LO inhibitors into AcDex-based
NPs allows for efficient inhibition of 5-LO activity in neutrophils
in the presence of albumin because of effective uptake and circumvention
of plasma protein binding.