| Literature DB >> 33233734 |
Elizabeth M Rhea1,2, Aric F Logsdon1,2, William A Banks1,2, Michelle E Erickson1,2.
Abstract
This review highlights the pre-clinical and clinical work performed to use intranasal delivery of various compounds from growth factors to stem cells to reduce neuroimmune interactions. We introduce the concept of intranasal (IN) delivery and the variations of this delivery method based on the model used (i.e., rodents, non-human primates, and humans). We summarize the literature available on IN delivery of growth factors, vitamins and metabolites, cytokines, immunosuppressants, exosomes, and lastly stem cells. We focus on the improvement of neuroimmune interactions, such as the activation of resident central nervous system (CNS) immune cells, expression or release of cytokines, and detrimental effects of signaling processes. We highlight common diseases that are linked to dysregulations in neuroimmune interactions, such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, stroke, multiple sclerosis, and traumatic brain injury.Entities:
Keywords: cytokine; growth factor; intranasal; neurodegenerative disease; neuroimmunology; vitamin
Year: 2020 PMID: 33233734 PMCID: PMC7699866 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12111120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Intranasal (IN) delivery of therapeutics aids in targeting neuroinflammation in many different central nervous system (CNS) diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke, and traumatic brain injuries. Generated with BioRender.com.
Summary of outcome following intranasal delivery.
| IN-Delivered Item | Associated disease | Biochemical | Behavior | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| IGF-1 | Neuroinflammation | ↓ microglia/PMN/neurons | Improved motor function | [ |
| Stroke | ↓ infarct volume | Improved motor function | [ | |
| Insulin | Alzheimer’s disease | Alter inflammatory pathways | Improved memory | [ |
| ↓ astrocyte/microglia activation | [ | |||
| Improves neuroinflammation | Improved memory | [ | ||
| Traumatic brain injury | ↓ lesion volume; ↓ microglia activation | [ | ||
| FGF | Alzheimer’s disease | ↑ neurogenesis; ↓ hippocampal loss | Improved memory | [ |
| ↓ Aβ deposition, tau hyperphosphorylation, astrocyte/microglia activation | Improved memory | [ | ||
| Neuroinflammation | modifies microglia signaling, DAMPs, PAMPs | [ | ||
| Parkinson’s disease | ↑ dopaminergic neuron function; ↓ astrocyte/microglia activation | Improves behavioral deficit | [ | |
| Stroke (hypoxia/ischemia) | ↓ pro-inflammatory cytokines | [ | ||
| BDNF | Depression | Improved behavior | [ | |
| Parkinson’s disease | ↑ dopaminergic neurons | Improved motor function | [ | |
| Stroke | No change in infarct volume; altered neuroinflammatory profile | [ | ||
| NGF | Human GBS meningitis* | Improved neurological impairment | [ | |
| Human traumatic brain injury* | ↑ neurogenesis | Improved neurological impairment | [ | |
| Traumatic brain injury | ↓ edema and cell death | [ | ||
| PACAP | Alzheimer’s disease | ↓ RAGE | Improved memory | [ |
| Huntington’s disease | ↑ BDNF, synapses;↓ mutant huntingtin aggregates | Improved memory | [ | |
| Muscular dystrophy (SBMA) | ↑ polyQ-AR degradation; improve neurotoxicity | [ | ||
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| 9- | Alzheimer’s disease | ↓ Aβ deposition, astrocyte activation, and pro-inflammatory cytokines; ↑ synapses | [ | |
| Stroke | ↑ neurogenesis | Improved dark cycle motor deficits | [ | |
| Vitamin D3 | Subarachnoid hemorrhage | ↓ BBB disruption; ↑ osteopontin; restore P-gp | [ | |
| Vitamin E | Parkinson’s disease | ↓ oxidative stress | Improved behavior | [ |
| NBP | Traumatic brain injury | ↑ neuro/angio-genesis, BDNF, VEGF, eNOS | [ | |
|
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| TGF-β | Stroke | ↑ neurogenesis | Improved outcome | [ |
| G-CSF | Stroke | ↑ angiogenesis | Improved outcome | [ |
| IL-13 | Traumatic brain injury | ↓ neuroinflammation | Improved outcome | [ |
| IL-10 | Depression | Alters Ido1 protein levels | Affects depressive-like behavior | [ |
| TNF-α inhibitor | Neuroinflammation | ↓ neuroinflammation, TNF-α expression | [ | |
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| Rapamycin | Down syndrome | ↓ mTORC1/tau hyper-phosphorylation, Aβ deposition, oxidative stress | Improved memory | [ |
| Sestrin2 | Stroke | ↓ infarct volume | Improved memory | [ |
| Cyclosporine-A | Neuroinflammation | ↓ neuroinflammation | [ | |
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| Curcumin-loaded | Multiple sclerosis (EAE) | ↓ IL-1β | Improved outcome | [ |
| Catalase-loaded | Parkinson’s disease | ↓ dopaminergic neuron loss, reactive microgliosis | [ | |
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| MSC-EVs | Alzheimer’s disease | ↓ reactive microgliosis, dendritic spine loss | [ | |
| MSC-fasudil | Parkinson’s disease | ↓ dopaminergic neuron loss, immune response | Improved motor function | [ |
| MSC-oligodendrocytes | Multiple sclerosis (EAE) | ↓ neuroinflammation; ↑ myelination | Improved behavior | [ |
IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor-1; FGF, fibroblast growth factor; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; NGF, nerve growth factor; PACAP, pituitary adenylate-cyclase-activating polypeptide 38; GBS, group B Streptococcus; SBMA, spinobulbar muscular atrophy; EAE, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; NBP, DL-3-n-butylphthalide; TGF, transforming growth factor; G-CSF, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor; IL, interleukin; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; MSC, mesenchymal stem cell; EV, extracellular vesicle; PMN, polymorphonuclear neutrophils; DAMP, damage-associated molecular pattern; PAMP, pathogen-associated molecular pattern; RAGE, receptor for advanced glycation end products; polyQ-AR, polyglutamine androgen receptor; BBB, blood–brain barrier; Aβ, amyloid beta; P-gp, p-glycoprotein; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; eNOS, endothelial nitric oxide synthase; Ido-1, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; mTORC1, mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1.The effects following intranasal (IN) delivery of each substrate/compound/cell-type covered in this review are summarized here with the disease investigated and a brief synopsis of the biochemical and behavioral changes observed for each reference. Clinical studies are denoted with an *.