| Literature DB >> 33336066 |
Sante Di Gioia1, Md Niamat Hossain1, Massimo Conese2.
Abstract
Exosomes-like nanoparticles can be released by a variety of plants and vegetables. The relevance of plant-derived nanovesicles (PDNVs) in interspecies communication is derived from their content in biomolecules (lipids, proteins, and miRNAs), absence of toxicity, easy internalization by mammalian cells, as well as for their anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, and regenerative properties. Due to these interesting features, we review here their potential application in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), liver diseases, and cancer as well as their potentiality as drug carriers. Current evidence indicate that PDNVs can improve the disease state at the level of intestine in IBD mouse models by affecting inflammation and promoting prohealing effects. While few reports suggest that anticancer effects can be derived from antiproliferative and immunomodulatory properties of PDNVs, other studies have shown that PDNVs can be used as effective delivery systems for small molecule agents and nucleic acids with therapeutic effects (siRNAs, miRNAs, and DNAs). Finally, since PDNVs are characterized by a proven stability in the gastrointestinal tract, they have been considered as promising delivery systems for natural products contained therein and drugs (including nucleic acids) via the oral route.Entities:
Keywords: antitumoral; drug delivery; exosome-like nanoparticles; inflammatory bowel disease; miRNAs
Year: 2020 PMID: 33336066 PMCID: PMC7718644 DOI: 10.1515/med-2020-0160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Med (Wars)
Figure 1Biological properties of PDNVs. PDNVs can regulate in vitro and in vivo the function of macrophages and dendritic cells by inducing anti-inflammatory and regulatory functions, as well as shifting tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) from a M2 to a M1 phenotype. PDNVs have been demonstrated to participate in intestinal tissue homeostasis in in vivo animal models and have validated functions against inflammation-related diseases and cancers. Finally, the efficacy of PDNVs for gene or drug delivery has been shown.
Physicochemical and biological properties of plant-derived nanovesicles
| Source of plant-derived nanoparticles (PDNVs) | Chemical properties | Physical properties | Biological properties | Ref. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipids | Proteins | RNAs | Size and surface charge (zeta potential) | Structure | Toxicity | Cell uptake | Natural targeting properties | Stability | ||
| Grape exosome-like nanoparticles (GELNs) | 98% phospholipids (50% phosphatidic acids), 2% galactolipids | 28 proteins Proteins regulating the carbohydrate/lipid metabolism | 96 miRNAs | Size | Referred as exosome like | Uptaken by mouse intestinal epithelial cell line CT26 | [ | |||
| 380.5 ± 37.47 nm Charge −26.3 ± 8.14 mV | ||||||||||
| Grapefruit-derived nanovesicles (GFDNs) | 29% phosphatidylcholine, 46% phosphatidylethanolamine | 137 proteins Proteins regulating the carbohydrate/lipid metabolism | Size 210.8 ± 48.62 nm Charge −49.2 to −1.52 mV | Nontoxic to mouse macrophage cell line | Uptaken by mouse intestinal macrophages | Intestinal macrophages of mouse model | Very stable at physiologic temperature (37 °C) | [ | ||
| Naringin and naringenin | ||||||||||
| Grapefruit-derived nanovesicles (GFDNs) | 24% phosphatidylethanolamine, 23% phosphatidylcholine, 13% phosphatidylinositol, 10% diacylglycerol | Size | Multilayer flower-like structures | Nontoxic to A549 and CT26 cells (nonhematopoietic cells) | Uptaken by GL26, A549, SW620, CT26, and 4T1 cells (tumor cell lines) | Splenic and liver cells of mouse model | Very stable at 4 °C for more than one month and a loaded cargo (curcumin) | [ | ||
| 180 to 200 nm | ||||||||||
| Ginger-derived nanovesicles (GDNs) | 37.03 and 40.41% phosphatidic acid for band 1 and band 2 respectively, 39.93 and 32.88% digalactosyldiacylglycerol for band 1 and band 2 respectively, 16.92 and 19.65% monogalactosyldiacylglycerol for band 1 and band 2, respectively | Size | Uptaken by primary hepatocytes | Hepatocytes are the primary targeted cells | Very stable in stomach-like (pH 2.0) and small intestine-like solutions (pH 6.5) | [ | ||||
| ∼386.6 nm for band 1, ∼294.1 nm from band 2 | ||||||||||
| Charge | ||||||||||
| −24.6 mV to −29.7 mV | ||||||||||
| Ginger-derived nanovesicles (GDNs) | ∼25–40% phosphatidic acid, ∼25–40% digalactosyldiacylglycerol, ∼20–30% monogalactosyldiacyglycerol | actin and proteolysis enzymes, membrane channel/transporters | 125 different miRNAs (15–27 nt) | Size | Nontoxic to Colon-26 epithelial-like cell lines, RAW 264.7 macrophage-like cell lines | Colon of mouse model | Extremely stable at room temperature over 7 days (band 1 and 2), tolerate freeze/thaw cycles | [ | ||
| ∼292.5 nm form band 1, 232 nm from band 2, 220 nm from band 3. | ||||||||||
| Charge | ||||||||||
| −12 mV at pH 6 for band 1 and 2, −2.1 mV for band 3 | ||||||||||
| Ginger-derived nanovesicles (GDNs) | Size | Exosome-like | Low cytotoxicity on somatic cell (HEK293), cancer cell (KB) | [ | ||||||
| Cushion method: 123.5 nm | ||||||||||
| Pellet method: 124.5 nm | ||||||||||
| Ginger-derived nanovesicles (GDNs) | Size | Uptaken by BMDM (bone marrow-derived macrophages) | [ | |||||||
| DLS: ∼130 nm | ||||||||||
| SEM: 120–150 nm | ||||||||||
|
| 580 proteins | Size ranged between 50 and 70 nm | Exosome-like | Uptaken by A549 (human lung carcinoma cell line), LAMA84 (chronic myeloid leukemia cell line) | Liver, spleen, and partially by kidneys of mouse model | [ | ||||
|
| 23 nucleotide small RNAs | Size | Round or cup-shaped objects | Nontoxic to MSCs (mesenchymal stromal cells) | Uptaken by MSCs | [ | ||||
| 30–100 nm | ||||||||||
|
| 1,018 proteins, 162 proteins associated with transport | Size 75–345 nm | [ | |||||||
| Gene | ||||||||||
| Ontology (GO): 71 transmembrane transporters, 53 vesicle-mediated transporters and 50 intracellular transporters | ||||||||||
| Edible plant-derived exosome-like nanoparticles (11 fruits and vegetables) | Lipid profile in grape- and grapefruit-derived NVs different from that in ginger and carrot | 418 conserved miRNAs, Ginger ( | Size | Round or oval | [ | |||||
| 100–1,000 nm | ||||||||||
| Edible plant-derived exosome-like nanoparticles (grape, grapefruit, ginger, carrot) | Total RNAs extracted from grape and grapefruit much less abundant than in ginger and carrot. | Intestinal macrophages and stem cells | The size of NVs was altered in stomach-like and intestinal-like conditions in a pH-dependent manner. | [ | ||||||
| Grape NVs contain miRNAs that are enriched for miR169 family. | ||||||||||
| Exosome-like nanoparticles from coconut water | 36 miRNAs | Size | [ | |||||||
| coconut water 59.72 nm, milk sample 100.40 nm | ||||||||||
| Broccoli-derived nanoparticles (BDNs) | Lipids (sulforaphane) | Size | [ | |||||||
| ∼18 and 118 nm | ||||||||||
| Charge | ||||||||||
| −39 to −2.6 mV | ||||||||||
| Broccoli phytochemicals–coated gold nanoparticles (B-AuNPs) | Size | Uptaken by breast (triple negative) cancer cell lines MDA-MB-231 and prostate cancer cell lines PC-3 | Excellent stability in biological fluids (0.5% cysteine, 0.2 M histidine, 0.5% human serum albumin (HSA), 0.5% bovine serum albumin (BSA), and 1% NaCl solutions) at physiological pH (pH 7 and 9) | [ | ||||||
| hydrodynamic size as 90 ± 5 nm | ||||||||||
| Charge | ||||||||||
| −29.0 mV | ||||||||||
| Wheat-derived nanovesicles (WDNPs) | Size | Exosome-like | Nontoxic to HDF (primary human dermal fibroblast cell line), HUVEC (human umbilical vein endothelial cells), and HaCaT cells (human keratinocyte cell line) | [ | ||||||
| Between 40 and 100 nm | ||||||||||
| Ginseng-derived nanovesicles (GSNVs) | 59.4% digalactosyl monoacylglycerol, 16.8% phosphatidyl ethanolamine, 13.8% ceramide | 3,129 proteins | Size | Similar to mammalian-derived extracellular vesicles | Nontoxic to BMDMs (bone marrow-derived macrophages) | Uptaken by BMDMs (bone marrow-derived mouse macrophages) | Liver and spleen of mouse model | [ | ||
| ∼344.8 nm for band 3 | B16F10 (mouse melanoma cell line) | |||||||||
| Charge | 4T1 (mouse mammary carcinoma line), HEK293T (human embtyonic kidney cell line) | |||||||||
| −25.4 mV | ||||||||||
| Apple-derived nanoparticles (APNPs) | RNAs ranging in size from 20 to 30 nt and from 50 to 70 nt | Size | Uptaken by Caco.2 cells (intestinal epithelium) | Disappear when boiled or sonicated | [ | |||||
| 100–400 nm by nanosizer | ||||||||||
| 100–200 nm by eectron microscopy | ||||||||||
Figure 2Physical characteristics of PDNVs obtained from different edible plants. (a) Three bands were formed after sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation. NVs from grape, grapefruit, ginger, and carrot from the 30%/45% interface were visualized by the electron microscopy. Reprinted from ref. [41] with permission from John Wiley and Sons. (b) Two bands from sucrose-banded ginger rhizome root-derived samples were formed after gradient ultracentrifugation (left). GDN and GDN2 particles were visualized by AFM (right). From ref. [31]. (c) Ginseng root juice was purified by sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation, and the band from the interface of 45% (band 3) was harvested (left panel) and characterized by TEM (right panel). Adapted from ref. [54]. (d) Grapefruit-derived lipids were analyzed by electron microscopy. Original magnification was 50,000×. A multilayer flower-like structure is observable. Reprinted from ref. [32] with permission from Springer Nature. (e) Shiitake mushroom–derived exosome-like NVs under SEM. Main figure: magnification 20,000×, inset: magnification 50,000× (from ref. [42]).
PDNVs as drug carrier
| Source of the nanovectors/nanocarriers | Target | Drug substances | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grapefruit | Colon cancer | Doxorubicin (Dox), curcumin | [ |
| Tumor cells (4T1, GL26, A549, CT26, or SW620) | JSI-124 (anti-Stat3 inhibitor), paclitaxel (PTX), luciferase gene siRNA | [ | |
| GL26 brain tumor cells | miR17 | [ | |
| Intestinal macrophages | Methotrexate (MTX) | [ | |
| Liver Kupffer cells | miR-18a | [ | |
| Broccoli | Colon tissue | Sulforaphane | [ |
| Apple | Human epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) cells | miRNAs | [ |
| Citrus limon | Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) | Proteins | [ |
| Ginger | Colon cancer cell lines | Doxorubicin (Dox) | [ |
| Colon-26 cells and HT-29 cells | |||
| RAW 264.7 macrophages and Colon-26 cells | siRNA-CD98 | [ | |
| Intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) | miRNA, 6-gingerol, and 6-shogaol | [ | |
Anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, and regenerative properties of plant-derived nanovesicles
| Vegetable/fruit | Properties | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Grapefruit | GFDNs enhance nuclear translocation of Nrf2 in RAW 264.7 macrophages | [ |
| Carrot | NVs enhance expression of | [ |
| Ginger | GDNs (band 2) enhance expression of | [ |
| GDNs block NLRP3 activation in BMDM as judged by inhibition of Caspase 1 cleavage and IL-1β release | [ | |
| GDNs (band 1 and band 2) increase Nrf2 nuclear translocation and reduction of ROS in mouse hepatocytes | [ | |
| Grapefruit | GFDNs upregulate the expression of | [ |
| Broccoli | BDN-derived lipids impair the ability of BMDCs to respond to LPS; they induce an anti-inflammatory response in BMDC-T cell co-cultures | [ |
| Shiitake mushroom | SMNs block NLRP3 activation in BMDM, as judged by inhibition of Caspase 1 cleavage and IL-1β release, upon different inflammasome activators | [ |
|
| ||
| Grape | GELNs promote | [ |
| Ginger | GDNs dampen inflammation and epithelial erosion in the DSS-induced ulcerative colitis in mouse; reduce anti-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6) and induce anti-inflammatory and pro-healing cytokines (IL-10, IL-22); accelerate wound healing in Caco2-BBE monolayers | [ |
| Wheat grass | WDNs promote proliferation and exert anti-apoptotic effects on HDF (primary human dermal fibroblasts), HUVEC (human endothelial vascular endothelial cells), and HaCaT (human keratinocytes), induce tube branching in HUVEC, and increase collagen type I expression in HaCaT as both protein and mRNA | [ |
BMDCs: bone marrow-derived dendritic cells; BMDM: bone marrow-derived macrophages; HO-1: heme oxygenase-1; IL: interleukin; Nrf2: nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2; NVs: nanovesicles; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; ROS: reactive oxygen species; TNF: tumor necrosis factor.