Snail slime, well-known for its outstanding benefits in wound healing and skin disorders, is just beginning to be investigated for its potential in treating gastrointestinal inflammatory diseases. This study presents novel microparticle-based powders as functional excipients for oral dosage forms, produced via spray-drying (SD) of Helix Aspersa Muller snail mucus combined with pectin and starch. Two formulations were developed: SS_SD_40 (40 wt% slime, 60 wt% pectin/starch 1:1) and SS_SD_20 (20 wt% slime, 80 wt % pectin/starch 1:1). Pure slime showed low yield (17.4 % w/w) and high stickiness, whereas blending with pectin and starch improved yields up to 50 %. The resulting powders had well-defined microparticles with diameters of 9.70 μm and 7.56 μm. HPLC analysis confirmed allantoin preservation (>94 % recovery). SS_SD_40 and SS_SD_20 displayed acceptable flowability as a pharmaceutical grade powder, low water content, and mucoadhesiveness under simulated GI conditions. Antioxidant tests revealed dose-dependent radical scavenging, with SS_SD_20 achieving up to 60 % higher activity and lowest IC50 than the other investigated samples. Antiinflammatory effects, assessed by BSA denaturation, were strongest for SS_SD_40 (~90 % inhibition at 2.5 mg/ml and lowest IC50 that the other samples). Both samples showed no cytotoxicity towards Caco-2 cells and reduced IL-6 and IL-8 secretion. The synergistic combination of snail slime, pectin, and starch produced multifunctional, biocompatible powders suitable as new functional excipients for oral formulations.
Cabibbo, M., Scialabba, C., Drago, S.E., Craparo, E.F., Cavallaro, G. (2025). From nature to medicine: snail slime-based functional excipients for oral dosage forms. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS, 682 [10.1016/j.ijpharm.2025.125914].
From nature to medicine: snail slime-based functional excipients for oral dosage forms
M. Cabibbo;C. Scialabba;S. E. Drago;E. F. Craparo
;G. Cavallaro
2025-01-01
Abstract
Snail slime, well-known for its outstanding benefits in wound healing and skin disorders, is just beginning to be investigated for its potential in treating gastrointestinal inflammatory diseases. This study presents novel microparticle-based powders as functional excipients for oral dosage forms, produced via spray-drying (SD) of Helix Aspersa Muller snail mucus combined with pectin and starch. Two formulations were developed: SS_SD_40 (40 wt% slime, 60 wt% pectin/starch 1:1) and SS_SD_20 (20 wt% slime, 80 wt % pectin/starch 1:1). Pure slime showed low yield (17.4 % w/w) and high stickiness, whereas blending with pectin and starch improved yields up to 50 %. The resulting powders had well-defined microparticles with diameters of 9.70 μm and 7.56 μm. HPLC analysis confirmed allantoin preservation (>94 % recovery). SS_SD_40 and SS_SD_20 displayed acceptable flowability as a pharmaceutical grade powder, low water content, and mucoadhesiveness under simulated GI conditions. Antioxidant tests revealed dose-dependent radical scavenging, with SS_SD_20 achieving up to 60 % higher activity and lowest IC50 than the other investigated samples. Antiinflammatory effects, assessed by BSA denaturation, were strongest for SS_SD_40 (~90 % inhibition at 2.5 mg/ml and lowest IC50 that the other samples). Both samples showed no cytotoxicity towards Caco-2 cells and reduced IL-6 and IL-8 secretion. The synergistic combination of snail slime, pectin, and starch produced multifunctional, biocompatible powders suitable as new functional excipients for oral formulations.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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