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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/P002544/1
Title: Establishing a Design Blueprint for Nanomedicines for Oral Drug Delivery
Principal Investigator: Vllasaliu, Dr D
Other Investigators:
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Department: School of Pharmacy
Organisation: University of Lincoln
Scheme: First Grant - Revised 2009
Starts: 05 December 2016 Ends: 23 April 2017 Value (£): 101,218
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Biological & Medicinal Chem.
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
21 Jul 2016 EPSRC Physical Sciences Chemistry - July 2016 Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
Oral administration is by far the most preferred way of taking medicines. Other drug administration routes are associated with decreased patient acceptability and compliance, as well as pain, high costs and risks (e.g. injections). Patient preference for oral administration is reflected in drug development processes, whereby a new drug compound is almost always aimed for oral delivery (exceptions exist in the case of drugs for local treatment such as creams for skin conditions and inhalers for asthma). However, currently it is not possible to deliver all drugs through the oral route. This is largely because some drugs are 1) prone to degradation in the stomach environment and 2) do not cross the intestinal wall in sufficient levels to show clinical benefit (drugs need to be in the blood to exert systemic therapeutic effect). A good example is insulin: patients requiring insulin therapy usually need between 2-5 injections per day as lifelong therapy. This project's ambition is to establish a design blueprint for engineering drug carriers that enable or improve oral drug delivery. Drug carriers considered in this project are based on extremely small particles (diameters equivalent to 1/1000th of the thickness of a human hair) or nanoparticles with the ability to cross the intestinal epithelium, carrying the drug cargo across the intestinal wall.

The use of nanoparticles to enable oral drug delivery has been proposed before. However, a key problem is that nanoparticles, similarly to some drugs such as insulin and antibody-based medicines, do not readily cross the intestinal wall or epithelium. This is because of the anatomy of the intestinal epithelium, which consists of a layer of closely packed and interconnected cells forming a fence which presents a formidable barrier to the movement of material from the intestinal lumen to blood. Central to this project is rational design and fabrication of nanoparticles that readily cross the intestinal epithelium. To this end, we will first create a number of compounds (peptides) designed to cross the intestinal tissue barrier (epithelium) through receptors that normally transport biological molecules. We will then attach these 'transport enabling peptides' in varying amounts to the surface of nanoparticles of different size. The resulting systems will be evaluated in an intestinal model based on human intestinal epithelium cells grown in the lab, mimicking the intestinal tissue.

In previous work the applicant has identified a number of key technological advances that underpin the current application. The proposed project is therefore based on the applicant's long-standing efforts - including prior work pertinent to the current proposal - to improve oral drug delivery. We will create a number of different systems, using a rational design approach based on previous experience and preliminary data, and test them in a robust way. This will enable us to identify nanoparticles 'decorated' with transport enabling peptides that readily cross the intestinal tissue barrier. The characteristics of these systems (e.g. nanoparticle size and identity of transport enabling peptide) that enable transport across the intestinal tissue will result in a design blueprint for nanoparticles with the ability to carry drug cargo across the intestinal wall, enabling oral administration of drugs that currently cannot be taken by this route.
Key Findings
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Potential use in non-academic contexts
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Summary
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Organisation Website: http://www.lincoln.ac.uk