| Literature DB >> 32536862 |
Ajay Kumar1, Anas Ahmad1, Akshay Vyawahare1, Rehan Khan1.
Abstract
The movement of micro and macro molecules into and within a cell significantly governs several of their pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters, thus regulating the cellular response to exogenous and endogenous stimuli. Trafficking of various pharmacological agents and other bioactive molecules throughout and within the cell is necessary for the fidelity of the cells but has been poorly investigated. Novel strategies against cancer and microbial infections need a deeper understanding of membrane as well as subcellular trafficking pathways and essentially regulate several aspects of the initiation and spread of anti-microbial and anti-cancer drug resistance. Furthermore, in order to avail the maximum possible bioavailability and therapeutic efficacy and to restrict the unwanted toxicity of pharmacological bioactives, these sometimes need to be functionalized with targeting ligands to regulate the subcellular trafficking and to enhance the localization. In the recent past the scenario drug targeting has primarily focused on targeting tissue components and cell vicinities, however, it is the membranous and subcellular trafficking system that directs the molecules to plausible locations. The effectiveness of the delivery platforms largely depends on their physicochemical nature, intracellular barriers, and biodistribution of the drugs, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic paradigms. Most subcellular organelles possess some peculiar characteristics by which membranous and subcellular targeting can be manipulated, such as negative transmembrane potential in mitochondria, intraluminal delta pH in a lysosome, and many others. Many specialized methods, which positively promote the subcellular targeting and restrict the off-targeting of the bioactive molecules, exist. Recent advancements in designing the carrier molecules enable the handling of membrane trafficking to facilitate the delivery of active compounds to subcellular localizations. This review aims to cover membrane trafficking pathways which promote the delivery of the active molecule in to the subcellular locations, the associated pathways of the subcellular drug delivery system, and the role of the carrier system in drug delivery techniques.Entities:
Keywords: drug targeting pathways; membrane trafficking; membrane vesicle (MV); nanocarrier and delivery; subcellular transport
Year: 2020 PMID: 32536862 PMCID: PMC7267071 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1In eukaryotic cells, membrane trafficking is divided into two major pathways. In endocytosis, proteins are internalized from the outer cell surface into the early endosomes. The early endosome determines the trafficking route for the internalized material, either by sending it to the plasma membrane for recycling, degradation via the lysosome, or for retrieval by the trans-Golgi network. On the other hand, exocytosis translocates newly synthesized proteins into the ER, entering further into the cis-Golgi complex and is transported via the trans-Golgi network.
List of endocytosis pathways and targeting ligands.
| Type of Endocytosis | Targeting agents | Mediated by | Mechanism of internalization | Delivery vehicle | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phagocytosis | Folic acid | Neutrophils, macrophages | Caveolin-assisted | Ligand | ( |
| Macropinocytosis | Non-specific | Ras-activated PI3-kinases (class-1 PI3-kinase), Ras and probably the protein kinase Akt (which binds PIP3) | Actin-driven endocytic pathway | – | ( |
| Clathrin mediated | Mannose-6-phosphate, Transferrin, Riboflavin | Majority of cells | Clathrin-Dependent RME | Human serum albumin, PEGylated Liposomes, Polymeric chitosan vesicles, Bovine serum albumin | ( |
| Caveolae-mediated | – | Cells expressing Caveolin-I or have Caveolin-3 | Caveosomes | – | ( |
| Clathrin and Caveolin-independent | glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins, glycosphingolipid-binding toxins | GTPase Dynamin | Clathrin coated pits | – | ( |
Figure 2(A) Clathrin mediated drug transport across the cell membrane. Cell surface receptors bind the exogenous ligand and internalize the moiety by formation of clathrin, which implicates the role of various proteins like Rab, GTPases, and SNARE proteins etc. (B) Caveolae mediated transport of a drug or nanoparticle. It involves the formation of bulb-shaped, 50-60 nm plasma membrane invaginations, called caveolae, whose formation is driven by integral membrane proteins and peripheral membrane proteins.
Types of subcellular targeted drug delivery systems.
| S.No. | Target | Drug/Formulation | Mechanism | Disease | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Plasma membrane | Enfuvirtide C34 | Membrane targeted inhibition of HIV fusion complex | AIDS-HIV | ( |
| 2. | Nuclear targeting | RGD peptide systems | regression in αvβ3-overexpressing cancer | Human breast cancer and melanoma | ( |
| 3. | Nuclear targeting | Cell penetrating TAT peptides | enhancing cytoplasmic delivery, transfection efficiency | Liver cancer | ( |
| 4. | Nuclear targeting | Viral like particles/liposomes | Targeted gene delivery by viral-mediated vectors | Carcinoma | ( |
| 5. | Endosomes (early) | Cholesterol conjugated β-secretase inhibitors | Membrane attachment followed by endocytosis into endosomes | Alzheimer's disease | ( |
| 6. | Mitochondria | Paclitaxel liposomes | Better cellular uptake and accumulation in mitochondria and enhanced cytotoxicity | Liver cancer | ( |
| 7. | Mitochondria | Curcumin DQAsomes | Appreciable antioxidant and anti-inflammatory efficacy | Acute lung injury | ( |
| 8. | Mitochondria | Doxorubicin Cerasomes | greater drug accumulation in mitochondria and greater antitumor effect | Targeted Tumor therapy | ( |
| 9. | Mitochondria | Coenzyme Q10 Micelles | Enhanced cellular uptake and higher mitochondrial accumulation | oxidative stress and inflammation | ( |
| 10. | Mitochondria | α-tocopheryl succinate Mesoporous Silica NPs | Intracellular uptake and mitochondrial accumulation | Anticancer therapy | ( |
| 11. | Golgi Bodies and ER | Conjugated Antigenic peptide | Targeted presentation on MHC class I complex by conjugation to STX-B | Ovarian cancer, intestinal cancer and lymphomas | ( |
| 12. | Golgi Bodies and ER | Rhodamine-loaded PLGA (polylactic-co-glycolic acid) NPs | colocalization with early endosomes, late endosomes, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and Golgi apparatus | Respiratory, gut and renal targeted delivery | ( |
| 13. | Cell membrane (receptors) | Transferrin eight arm polyethylene glycol-dihydroartemisinine nanoparticles | Transferrin receptors mediated cellular internalization | Lewis Lung carcinoma | ( |
| 14. | Cell membrane (receptors) | Adenosine conjugated Solid Lipid Nanoparticles | G-protein coupled receptors mediated cellular internalization | Human cancer | ( |
| 15. | Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors | GE11 peptide conjugated Exosomes for microRNA | efficient delivery of microRNA (miRNA) to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-expressing breast cancer cells | Breast cancer | ( |
Figure 3Various carriers and their components employed in subcellular targeting. The nanocarriers are composed of hydrophobic and/or hydrophilic polymeric chains capable of encapsulating and delivering both kinds of therapeutic payloads.
Figure 4Membrane and subcellular trafficking implicated in the nuclear localization mechanism of drugs. The nanotransporter comprises an internalizable ligand which facilitates the receptor mediated cell entry, and a nuclear targeting moiety (nuclear localization sequence; NLS) which enters the nuclear region and regulates the gene expression.