| Literature DB >> 33519171 |
Collin T Inglut1, Kelsey M Gray1, Shruti Vig1, Jae W Jung1, Jillian Stabile1, Yuji Zhang2, Kimberly M Stroka1, Huang-Chiao Huang1.
Abstract
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) remains a major obstacle for drug delivery to the central nervous system. In particular, the tight and adherens junctions that join the brain capillary endothelial cells limit the diffusion of various molecules from the bloodstream into the brain. Photodynamic priming (PDP) is a non-cytotoxic modality that involves light activation of photosensitizers to photochemically modulate nearby molecules without killing the cells. Here we investigate the effects of sub-lethal photochemistry on junction phenotype (i.e., continuous, punctate, or perpendicular), as well as the BBB permeability in a transwell model of human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMECs). We showed that PDP decreases the continuous junction architecture by ~20%, increases the perpendicular junction architecture by ~40%, and has minimal impact on cell morphology in HBMECs. Furthermore, transwell permeability assay revealed that PDP improves the HBMEC permeability to dextran or nanoliposomes by up to 30-fold for 6-9 days. These results suggest that PDP could safely reverse the mature brain endothelial junctions without killing the HBMECs. This study not only emphasizes the critical roles of PDP in the modulation junction phenotype, but also highlights the opportunity to further develop PDP-based combinations that opens the cerebrum endothelium for enhanced drug transporter across the BBB.Entities:
Keywords: Benzoporphyrin derivatives; blood-brain barrier; light-controlled drug release; photochemistry; photodynamic priming
Year: 2020 PMID: 33519171 PMCID: PMC7839980 DOI: 10.1109/jstqe.2020.3024014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE J Sel Top Quantum Electron ISSN: 1077-260X Impact factor: 4.653