| Literature DB >> 32005712 |
Oscar A Marcos-Contreras1, Colin F Greineder1, Raisa Yu Kiseleva2, Hamideh Parhiz2, Landis R Walsh2, Viviana Zuluaga-Ramirez3, Jacob W Myerson2, Elizabeth D Hood2, Carlos H Villa2, Istvan Tombacz4, Norbert Pardi4, Alecia Seliga3, Barbara L Mui5, Ying K Tam5, Patrick M Glassman2, Vladimir V Shuvaev2,6, Jia Nong2, Jacob S Brenner2,6,7, Makan Khoshnejad8, Tom Madden5, Drew Weissmann4, Yuri Persidsky3, Vladimir R Muzykantov1,6.
Abstract
Drug targeting to inflammatory brain pathologies such as stroke and traumatic brain injury remains an elusive goal. Using a mouse model of acute brain inflammation induced by local tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), we found that uptake of intravenously injected antibody to vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (anti-VCAM) in the inflamed brain is >10-fold greater than antibodies to transferrin receptor-1 and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (TfR-1 and ICAM-1). Furthermore, uptake of anti-VCAM/liposomes exceeded that of anti-TfR and anti-ICAM counterparts by ∼27- and ∼8-fold, respectively, achieving brain/blood ratio >300-fold higher than that of immunoglobulin G/liposomes. Single-photon emission computed tomography imaging affirmed specific anti-VCAM/liposome targeting to inflamed brain in mice. Intravital microscopy via cranial window and flow cytometry showed that in the inflamed brain anti-VCAM/liposomes bind to endothelium, not to leukocytes. Anti-VCAM/LNP selectively accumulated in the inflamed brain, providing de novo expression of proteins encoded by cargo messenger RNA (mRNA). Anti-VCAM/LNP-mRNA mediated expression of thrombomodulin (a natural endothelial inhibitor of thrombosis, inflammation, and vascular leakage) and alleviated TNFα-induced brain edema. Thus VCAM-directed nanocarriers provide a platform for cerebrovascular targeting to inflamed brain, with the goal of normalizing the integrity of the blood-brain barrier, thus benefiting numerous brain pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: VCAM-1; blood–brain barrier; cerebrovascular drug targeting; drug delivery to brain; mRNA therapy
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32005712 PMCID: PMC7035611 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1912012117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205