| Literature DB >> 25610755 |
Rebecca L McCall1, Joseph Cacaccio2, Eileen Wrabel3, Mary E Schwartz3, Timothy P Coleman4, Rachael W Sirianni1.
Abstract
For as long as the human blood-brain barrier (BBB) has been evolving to exclude bloodborne agents from the central nervous system (CNS), pathogens have adopted a multitude of strategies to bypass it. Some pathogens, notably viruses and certain bacteria, enter the CNS in whole form, achieving direct physical passage through endothelial or neuronal cells to infect the brain. Other pathogens, including bacteria and multicellular eukaryotic organisms, secrete toxins that preferentially interact with specific cell types to exert a broad range of biological effects on peripheral and central neurons. In this review, we will discuss the directed mechanisms that viruses, bacteria, and the toxins secreted by higher order organisms use to enter the CNS. Our goal is to identify ligand-mediated strategies that could be used to improve the brain-specific delivery of engineered nanocarriers, including polymers, lipids, biologically sourced materials, and imaging agents.Entities:
Keywords: DGL, dendrigraft poly-l-lysine; Drug delivery; GABA, gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor; MMP-2, matrix metalloprotease-2; NCAM, neural cell adhesion molecule; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PEI, polyethylenimine; brain; central nervous system; nAchR, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor; pathogen; peptide; toxin
Year: 2014 PMID: 25610755 PMCID: PMC4292043 DOI: 10.4161/21688362.2014.944449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tissue Barriers ISSN: 2168-8362
Figure 1.The mechanisms by which human pathogens and the toxins they secrete achieve CNS entry include: (1) receptor- and non-receptor mediated transcytosis, (2), paracellular transport, (3), carriage within immune cells, (4) retrograde transport from the periphery, and (5) entry through regions of altered BBB permeability, such as those found in the choroid plexus of the cerebral ventricles or olfactory neurons.
Examples of neurotropic viruses and their receptors
| Virus | Point of transmission | Known Receptor Involvement | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Measles Virus | Respiratory | SLAM | |
| CD46 | |||
| ‘Receptor X’ | |||
| Cytomegalovirus | Oronasal;Sexually transmitted | Heparin sulfate proteoglycans | |
| EGFR | |||
| β1 integrins | |||
| TLR2 | |||
| Varicella Zoster Virus | Oronasal | Man6P | |
| Insulin degrading enzyme | |||
| Human Immunodeficiency Virus | Bloodborne; Sexually transmitted | CD4 CXCR4 CCR5 | |
| Rabies Virus | Peripheral tissue exposure; Aerosol | NCAM | |
| NAChR | |||
| P75NTR | |||
| West Nile Virus | Bloodborne | TLR3 | |
| αVβ3 integrin | |||
| Polio Virus | Oronasal | CD155 |
Pathogenic ligands known to bind to 37/67kDa receptor (LamR)
| Pathogen | LamR-binding ligand | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | CNF1 | ||
| CbpA | |||
| PilQ, PorA | |||
| OmpP2 | |||
| Viruses | Dengue virus | Glycoprotein E | |
| West Nile virus | Glycoprotein E | ||
| Tick borne encephalitis virus | Glycoprotein E | ||
| Sindbis virus | E2 Glycoprotein | ||
| Japanese encephalitis virus | Unknown |
Three-finger toxins that specifically target nAChR and have been associated with BBB penetration
| Snake | Scientific Name | Toxin Name | Relative IC50 | How IC50 was determined | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King Cobra | Toxin B | 32.5 nM | Assayed competitive binding against α-Bgtx on brain capillary endothelial cells | ||
| Monocled Cobra | α-Cobratoxin | 4.1 nM | Xenopus oocytes expressing human α7-nAChR | ||
| Pygmy Copperhead | α-elapitoxin-Al2a | 1.2 μM | SH-SY5Y cells |
Conopeptides that specifically interact with nAChR and are associated with BBB penetration
| Protein | Superfamily/species | Target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| AlphaD-cap | D-superfamily | α7 | 133 |
| AlphaD-mus | D superfamily | α7 | |
| ArIA | A superfamily | α7 | |
| ArIB | A superfamily | α7 | |
| A-TxIA | A superfamily | α7 | |
| TxIA(A10L) | A superfamily | α7 | |
| LsIA | α7 ≥ α3β2 | ||
| PnIB | α7 > α3β2 | ||
| GID | α7 > α3β2 > α4β2 | ||
| ImI | α7 |
Figure 2.Bio-inspired nanocarriers can be engineered to improve drug delivery to the CNS. In this example, a solid polymer nanoparticle encapsulates a therapeutic (small molecule, nucleic acid, or protein) or imaging agent. The surface of the viral-sized nanoparticle is modified to display a pathogen-derived peptide (e.g., rabies virus glycoprotein) that will facilitate passage of nanoparticle with cargo across the BBB. Therapeutic compounds that have been encapsulated in biodegradable nanoparticles will be released slowly over time for targeted treatment. A solid polymer nanoparticle is shown as one example of a targeted drug carrier; many other types of carriers or conjugates can be similarly modified to improve CNS delivery (for example, liposomes, micelles, drug-antibody conjugates, and others).
Examples of CNS-directed delivery achieved by pathogenic strategies
| Ligand | Pathogen | Entry | Payload | Vehicle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rabies Virus Glyocprotein (RVG) | Rabies Virus | nAchR, P75, NCAM, GABA; presumed direct passage across the BBB; retrograde transport is possible | Nucleic Acids | Exosomes139 |
| Chlorotoxin (CTX) | Scorpion Venom ( | Cl- channels and MMP-2; presumed direct passage across the BBB | Nucleic Acids | Particles |
| Dendrotoxin | Mamba Snake | K+ channel | Quantum Dots | |
| Conantokin-G | Snail Venom | NMDA receptors | Particles | |
| Tetanus toxin | Peripheral nerve polysialogangliosides | Nucleic Acids | Particles | |
| Hannah toxin | King Cobra Snake | nAchR | Small Molecules131 | Micelles |