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Abstract
Celastrol (CST) is a promising natural drug of herbal origin that gained a great interest
in the recent years by virtue of its wide variety of pharmacological actions. Nowadays,
CST is extensively studied as a natural anticancer surrogate with a potential activity
against various types of cancers. However, CST suffers from many limitations that
handicapped its clinical utility such as limited aqueous solubility and poor gastrointestinal
absorption which resulted into its low oral bioavailability. This work spotlights,
for the first time, development of self-assembled phytosomal nanocarriers (CST-PHY)
for improving CST solubility and oral bioavailability. First CST-phospholipid complex
was prepared by a simple solvent evaporation technique. Formation of CST-phospholipid
complex was confirmed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), infrared spectroscopy
(IR), powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and partition coefficient determination. After
dispersion into deionized water, CST-phospholipid complex was self-assembled to form
CST-PHY. The optimized CST-PHY demonstrated a nanometric particle size of 178.4±7.07nm
and a negative zeta potential of -38.7±3.61mV. Comparative in-vitro release study
showed the ability of phytosomes to significantly enhance CST release compared with
crude drug and physical mixture. Pharmacokinetic studies in rabbits revealed significant
improvement in CST-PHY oral bioavailability compared with crude CST evidenced by 4-fold
increase in AUC0-8 and 5-fold increase in Cmax of CST-PHY compared with crude CST.
Conclusively, the results confirmed the potential of phytosomal nanocarriers to improve
CST oral delivery paving the way for its use for oral cancer therapy.