| Literature DB >> 31540234 |
Badrul Alam Bony1, Forrest M Kievit2.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the main causes of disability in children and young adults, as well as a significant concern for elderly individuals. Depending on the severity, TBI can have a long-term impact on the quality of life for survivors of all ages. The primary brain injury can result in severe disability or fatality, and secondary brain damage can increase the complexities in cellular, inflammatory, neurochemical, and metabolic changes in the brain, which can last decades post-injury. Thus, survival from a TBI is often accompanied by lifelong disabilities. Despite the significant morbidity, mortality, and economic loss, there are still no effective treatment options demonstrating an improved outcome in a large multi-center Phase III trial, which can be partially attributed to poor target engagement of delivered therapeutics. Thus, there is a significant unmet need to develop more effective delivery strategies to overcome the biological barriers that would otherwise inhibit transport of materials into the brain to prevent the secondary long-term damage associated with TBI. The complex pathology of TBI involving the blood-brain barrier (BBB) has limited the development of effective therapeutics and diagnostics. Therefore, it is of great importance to develop novel strategies to target the BBB. The leaky BBB caused by a TBI may provide opportunities for therapeutic delivery via nanoparticles (NP). The focus of this review is to provide a survey of NP-based strategies employed in preclinical models of TBI and to provide insights for improved NP based diagnostic or treatment approaches. Both passive and active delivery of various NPs for TBI are discussed. Finally, potential therapeutic targets where improved NP-mediated delivery could increase target engagement are identified with the overall goal of providing insight into open opportunities for NP researchers to begin research in TBI.Entities:
Keywords: TBI; blood-brain barrier; nanomedicine; nanotheranostics; neurotrauma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31540234 PMCID: PMC6781280 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11090473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Summary of various nanoparticles for passive and active delivery for brain trauma applications a.
| NP Components | Therapeutic Mechanism | NP Size (nm) | NP Zeta Potential (mV) | Disease Model | Accumulation and Retention | Outcome | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nanodrug with tetra ethylene glycol | α-tocopherol in the NP acts as an antioxidant and releases ibuprofen to reduce neuroinflammation | 186 | Not reported | Mice | Accumulation shown after 36 h of intraperitoneal and intravenous injection | Behavior study showed significance for OFT (ambulatory) after IV injection, as compared to the saline group and not in IP. | [ |
| Oxygen reactive polymer | Thioether group acts as antioxidant | 8 | Not reported | Mice | Accumulated in damaged brain and retained for 18 h | Reduced neurodegeneration, astrogliosis, and activated microglia | [ |
| Core-Cross-linked NPs | Thioether group acts as antioxidant | 16 | Not reported | Mice | Accumulation shown within 1 h injection with retention for >2 h | Reduces intracellular ROS concentration in human astrocytes | [ |
| PEGylated hydrophilic carbon | Oxygen radical annihilation at graphitic domains of the carbon particles. | 50 | Not reported | Rat | 6 h determine SO and NO levels | Restoration of CBF normalized oxidative radical profile (SO and NO levels) | [ |
| PLGA NPs encapsulated with | Cerebrolysin is a mixture of neuroprotective peptides | 250–330 | −13 mV | Mice | Not reported | Thwarts the edema formation at longer time points compared to bolus injection | [ |
| PLGA NPs with/ without 800 CW | None | 200 | −39 mV | Mice | Accumulation shown within 1 h of injection with retention for >48 h | NPs with 800 CW displayed preferential binding to intracellular proteins of cells that have lost membrane integrity | [ |
| PLGA NPs coated with PX with BDNF encapsulation | BDNF acts as a neuroprotectant | 170 | Not reported | Mice | Not reported | Significantly increased BDNF delivery and improved neurological and cognitive deficits | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 PBCA NP HRP or EGFP | None | 150 | Not reported | Rat | Not reported | HRP or EGFP delivered via PBCA NPs cross BBB and | [ |
| Porous silicon NPs conjugated with targeting peptide (CAQK) loaded with siRNA against GFP | Not reported | 20 | Not reported | Mice | Accumulated in brain for 2 h | Higher accumulation with 70% silencing of GFP expression | [ |
| Targeted peptide from RVG, porous silicon NP graphene oxide (GO) coating with siRNA | None | 190 | +22.1 mV | Mice | Not reported | Increased (2.5-fold) delivery of siRNA via GO coated NPs compared to non-coating NPs | [ |
a TEG (tetra ethylene glycol), CCI (controlled cortical impact), OFT (open field test), i.v. (intravenous), i.p. (intraperitoneal), PEG (polyethylene glycol), FPI (fluid percussion injury), MMP (matrix metallopeptidase), CBF (cerebral blood flow), NO (nitrate radical), PLGA (poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)), PX (poloxamer 188), BDNF (brain derived neurotrophic factor), PBCA (polybutylcyanoacrylate), HRP (horse radish peroxidase), GFP (green fluorescent protein), EGFP (enhanced GFP), RVG (rabies virus glycoprotein).
Therapeutic targets where NP-mediated delivery could provide an advantage including references where NPs against these targets have been tested in preclinical animal models.
| Therapeutic Target | Pathophysiological Mechanism | Therapeutic NP Refs. |
|---|---|---|
| Reactive oxygen species | Increased oxidative stress leads to increased neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation. | [ |
| Ischemia | Lack of oxygen delivery to injured brain leads to ischemic brain damage. | [ |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Can increase oxidative stress and cell death in and around the injury. | [ |
| BBB breakdown | Leads to accumulation of neurotoxic blood products and reduced function of the neurovascular unit. | [ |
| Diffuse axonal injury | Neuronal membrane disruption leads to loss of axonal conduction and connections. | [ |
| Neuroinflammation | Chronic activation of resident microglia and astrocytes as well as peripheral immune cell infiltration leads to an inflammatory milieu preventing recovery. | [ |
| Neuroprotection | Direct protection of neurons from the dysregulated brain environment during secondary injury. | [ |
| Lipid peroxidation products | A cascading event where oxidation of lipids leads to formation of lipid peroxidation products, which leads to further oxidation of lipids. | None |
| Glutamate | Release from necrotic cells leads to excitotoxicity in surrounding neurons. | None |
| Calcium | Release from necrotic cells leads to excitotoxicity in surrounding neurons. | None |