| Literature DB >> 24818881 |
Soniya A Jain1, Himanish Basu2, Priyanka S Prabhu1, Umangi Soni1, Medha D Joshi1, Deepak Mathur3, Vandana B Patravale1, Sulabha Pathak4, Shobhona Sharma2.
Abstract
Antimalarial therapy is a major contributor to declining malaria morbidity and mortality. However, the high toxicity and low bioavailability of current antimalarials and emerging drug resistance necessitates drug-delivery research. We have previously developed glyceryl-dilaurate nanolipid carriers (GDL-NLCs) for antimalarial drug delivery. Here, we show evidence that GDL-NLCs themselves selectively target Plasmodium-infected red blood cells (iRBCs), and cause severe parasite impairment. The glyceryl-dilaurate lipid-moiety was important in the targeting. GDL-NLCs localized to the parasite mitochondrion and uptake led to mitochondrial-membrane polarization and Ca(2+) ion accumulation, ROS release, and stage-specific iRBC lysis. GDL-NLC treatment also resulted in externalization of iRBC-membrane phosphatidylserine and enhanced iRBC clearance by macrophages. GDL-NLC uptake disrupted the parasite-induced tubulovesicular network, which is vital for nutrient import by the parasite. Laser optical trap studies revealed that GDL-NLCs also restored iRBC flexibility. Such restoration of iRBC flexibility may help mitigate the vasculature clogging that can lead to cerebral malaria. We demonstrate the suitability of GDL-NLCs for intravenous delivery of antimalarial combinations artemether-clindamycin and artemether-lumefantrine in the murine model. Complete parasite clearance was achieved at 5-20% of the therapeutic dose of these combinations. Thus, this nanostructured lipid formulation can solubilize lipophilic drugs, selectively target and impair the parasite-infected red cell, and therefore constitutes a potent delivery vehicle for antimalarials.Entities:
Keywords: Drug-delivery; Glyceryl-dilaurate nanostructured lipid carriers; Infected-RBCs; Mitochondrion; NLCs; Plasmodium
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24818881 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2014.04.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479