| Literature DB >> 35592101 |
Narasimha M Beeraka1,2,3, Runze Zhou1, Xiaoyan Wang4, Hemanth Vikram P R5, Tegginamath Pramod Kumar6, Junqi Liu1, M V Greeshma3, Subhankar P Mandal5, B M Gurupadayya1, Ruitai Fan1.
Abstract
Severe steroid-resistant asthma (SSR) patients do not respond to the corticosteroid therapies due to the heterogeneity, and genome-wide variations. However, there are very limited reports pertinent to the molecular signaling underlying SSR and making pharmacologists, and formulation scientists to identify the effective therapeutic targets in order to produce novel therapies using novel drug delivery systems (NDDS). We have substantially searched literature for the peer-reviewed and published reports delineating the role of glucocorticoid-altered gene expression, and the mechanisms responsible for SSR asthma, and NDDS for treating SSR asthma using public databases PubMed, National Library of Medicine (NLM), google scholar, and medline. Subsequently, we described reports underlying the SSR pathophysiology through several immunological and inflammatory phenotypes. Furthermore, various therapeutic strategies and the role of signaling pathways such as mORC1-STAT3-FGFBP1, NLRP3 inflammasomes, miR-21/PI3K/HDAC2 axis, PI3K were delineated and these can be considered as the therapeutic targets for mitigating the pathophysiology of SSR asthma. Finally, the possibility of nanomedicine-based formulation and their applications in order to enhance the long term retention of several antioxidant and anti-asthmatic drug molecules as a significant therapeutic modality against SSR asthma was described vividly.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; inflammation; molecular signaling; nanomedicine; natural products; novel drug delivery systems; steroid resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35592101 PMCID: PMC9112344 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S364693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1The pathophysiology of asthma and the SSR asthma: Altered genomic mechanisms induced by the repeated intake of glucocorticoids in asthma conditions: Dissociation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and the chaperone protein dissociation can induce translocation of GRs into the nucleus. Thus, activation of GRE elements by the translocation of GR activity (when glucocorticoids taken) through specific and nonspecific interactions can provoke the modulation in the activity of HDCS (left panel), and the genome wide changes upon P38MAPK activity (Middle panel). Activation of SSR asthma (right panel) by the intake of allergens or due to infections through the formation of NLRP inflammasome; the administration of MCC950, YVA, and α-IL-1β to impair the pathophysiology induced through NLRP inflammasome and release of intracellular content that cause airway inflammation.
Figure 2Mitigation in the SSR asthma by modulating the miR-21/PTEN/PI3K/HDAC2 signaling suggesting the significant role of miR-21. Ant-21 and a pan-PI3K inhibitor LY294002 treatment mitigated the activity of PI3K and retrieved HDAC2 levels subsequently impaired the airway hyperresponsiveness and enhanced the steroid sensitivity to allergic airway disease.
Figure 3The pathophysiology and various antiasthmatic therapeutic modalities in the form of nanoformulations in treating asthma: Anti-IL-4Ra (ex. dupilumab), Anti-IgE (omalizumab), CRTH2 antagonist (Fevipiprant), antiIL-5R (benralizumab), Anti-IL-5 (meprolizumab), anti-TSLP (tezepelumab), chemokine receptors blockers, CCR5 modulators, specific kinase blockers, corticosteroids, chemokine receptor blockers, antiallergy blockers, cytokine agonists are prominent therapeutic strategies to target asthma pathophysiology; the nanoformulations (liposomes, nanoparticles, microparticles) by inducing surface modifications can enable responsive drug release against disease-specific enzymes. The therapeutic formulation loaded with antiasthmatic drugs can minimize the underlying pathophysiology of asthma or SSR (severe steroid resistant) asthma.
Various Nanocarrier Compositions (Liposome-Based Formulations) and the Method of Preparations and Their Mode of Actions in Targeting AADs Including Allergic Asthma: Possible Future Implications Against SSR Asthma
| Nanocarrier Composition | Drug | Method of Preparation | Size | Route of Administration, and Mode of Study (in vitro/in vivo/Clinical Trials) | Mode of Action | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-a-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and stearylamine | Catalase and superoxide dismutase | Reverse-phase evaporation | – | Intravenous; Sprague Dawley rat models, | Scavenge either subcellular organelle-derived reactive oxygen species or partially reduced reactive oxygen species generated by phagocytic cells infiltrating into or residing in oxygen-damaged lungs | [ |
| Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine | a-Tocopherol | Reverse-phase evaporation | 320 ± 40 nm | Intratracheal; rodent models | Reduced allergen-induced interleukin 3 and interleukin levels, and augmented levels of interleukin 12 in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Natural-source d-α-tocopheryl acetate improved airway responsiveness | [ |
| Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and cholesterol | Copper, ZincCatalase and superoxide dismutase | Reverse-phase evaporation | 200 nm | Intratracheal instillation; rabbit models | Increase in lung antioxidant enzyme levels which protects the pulmonary microvasculature from free radical-initiated injury. | [ |
| PEG-4-Acrylate and trypsin sensitive peptide sequence | Mesalamine | Encapsulation of liposomes with microgels | 200nm | Raw 264.7 cell line | NF-kB inhibitor and the nanoformulation could effectively mitigate the inflammation-induced pathophysiology | [ |
| Stealth liposomes(long circulating liposome formulation) | Budesonide | Aerosol | C57/Black 6 mice | Reducing markers of lung inflammation in experimental asthma | [ | |
| Stealth liposomes (long circulating liposome formulation) | Salbutamol sulfate | Thin film hydration technique | 167.2 ± 0.170 nm | Aerosol | Ameliorates the asthma-induced chronic alveolar obstruction | [ |
| Dilauroylphosphatidylcholine | Formoterol | Possibilities of formoterol to enhance the peripheral lung deposition of the inhaled liposome corticosteroids | ● Nebulizer | Bronchodilating effect | [ | |
| Freeze-dried soya phosphatidylcholine: cholesterol (1:1) | Salbutamol sulphate (SS) and beclometasonedipropionate | 73.80 + 1.70 nm | – | – | [ | |
| Encapsulated allergen | CpG-ODN, a synthetic TLR9 agonist | C57BL/6 mice (WT) | ● Intranasal | Anti-allergic effect, provided long-term protection | [ | |
| Dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) | Budesonide | 1.2 pm ± 1.9 nm | ● Pressurized metered dose inhaler (pMDI), sheep models | – | [ |
Various Nanocarrier Compositions (Nanoparticles) Formulated for Several Therapeutic Molecules and the Method of Preparations and Their Mode of Actions in Targeting AADs Including Allergic Asthma: Possible Future Implications Against SSR Asthma
| Nanocarrier Composition | Drug | Preparation Technique | Size | Mode of Administration | Mode of Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan (CS) and hyaluronic acid (HA) | Macromolecular drug heparin | Ionotropic gelation technique | 162 and 217 nm | Pulmonary administration | Heparin is released during the degranulation of mast cells and inhibits the proliferation of smooth muscle cells | [ |
| Poly PLA homopolymers and polyethylene glycol (PEG)- block-PLA copolymers | Betamethasone disodium phosphate | Oil-in-water solvent diffusion method | 116 ± 10 nm | Intravenous | Induces anti-inflammatory effects | [ |
| Stearic acid, lecithin and chloroform | Curcumin | Solvent injection method | 190.4 ± 10.6 nm | [ | ||
| PEGYlated bilirubin | Bilirubin | A carboxylic acid in bilirubin was activated by carbodiimide and reacted with amine-modified polyethylene glycol, yielding mono-PEGylated bilirubin | 94 ± 12 nm | Intravenous | Induces antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory effects during allergic reactions | [ |
| Chitosan, Tween-80, methanol | Prednisolone | Ionotropic external gelation technique | 130–450 nm | Oral dispersible tablets | Induces anti-inflammatory effects | [ |
| PEG5000-PLGA | Bavachinin, | Emulsion-solvent evaporation technique | 196 nm | Oral delivery | Selective inhibition of Th2 cytokine production | [ |
| Monoolein (MO) and celastrol | Celastrol | Ultrasonication method | 194.1 ± 9.78 nm | Celastrol-loaded LCNPs attenuate the inflammation via IL-1b. | [ | |
| Monoolein, Distilled water | Quercetin | Ultrasonication method | 210.0 to 268.7 nm | Induces anti-inflammatory effects in allergic conditions | [ | |
| Dimethyl sulfoxide, PLGA, l- dichloromethane, acetone | Andrographolide | Multiple-emulsion solvent evaporation technique | 205 nm | Oral/pulmonary administration | Mitigates the allergic asthma by impairing NF-kappaB signaling pathway | [ |
| Chitosan, Thioglycolic acid, sodium tripolyphosphate | Theophylline | 220 ± 23 nm | Intranasal delivery | Induces anti-inflammatory effects in allergic asthma | [ | |
| Chitosan, acetic acid, cinnamaldehyde | Baicalein | 285 ± 25 nm | Inhalation | Anti-asthma effects induced by impairing the NF-κB and inhibiting CCR7/CCL19/CCL21. | [ | |
| PEG-20000, dichloromethane, - poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA), Tween 80 | Atropine | Multiple emulsification solvent evaporation | 88.30 ± 7.54 nm | Inhalation route | Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) blockers | [ |