Selective targeting of nanomedicine to inflamed cerebral vasculature to enhance the blood–brain barrier

Oscar A. Marcos‐Contreras(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Colin F. Greineder(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Raisa Y. Kiseleva(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Hamideh Parhiz(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Landis R. Walsh(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Viviana Zuluaga‐Ramirez(Temple University), Jacob W. Myerson(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Elizabeth D. Hood(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Carlos H. Villa(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), István Tombácz(University of Pennsylvania), Norbert Pardi(University of Pennsylvania), Alecia Seliga(Temple University), Barbara L. Mui(Acuitas Therapeutics (Canada)), Ying K. Tam(Acuitas Therapeutics (Canada)), Patrick M. Glassman(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Vladimir V. Shuvaev(Target (United States)), Jia Nong(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Jacob S. Brenner(Target (United States)), Makan Khoshnejad(The Wistar Institute), Tom Madden(Acuitas Therapeutics (Canada)), Drew Weissmann(University of Pennsylvania), Yuri Persidsky(Temple University), Vladimir R. Muzykantov(Target (United States))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 31, 2020
Cited by 177Open Access
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Abstract

Drug targeting to inflammatory brain pathologies such as stroke and traumatic brain injury remains an elusive goal. Using a mouse model of acute brain inflammation induced by local tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), we found that uptake of intravenously injected antibody to vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (anti-VCAM) in the inflamed brain is >10-fold greater than antibodies to transferrin receptor-1 and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (TfR-1 and ICAM-1). Furthermore, uptake of anti-VCAM/liposomes exceeded that of anti-TfR and anti-ICAM counterparts by ∼27- and ∼8-fold, respectively, achieving brain/blood ratio >300-fold higher than that of immunoglobulin G/liposomes. Single-photon emission computed tomography imaging affirmed specific anti-VCAM/liposome targeting to inflamed brain in mice. Intravital microscopy via cranial window and flow cytometry showed that in the inflamed brain anti-VCAM/liposomes bind to endothelium, not to leukocytes. Anti-VCAM/LNP selectively accumulated in the inflamed brain, providing de novo expression of proteins encoded by cargo messenger RNA (mRNA). Anti-VCAM/LNP-mRNA mediated expression of thrombomodulin (a natural endothelial inhibitor of thrombosis, inflammation, and vascular leakage) and alleviated TNFα-induced brain edema. Thus VCAM-directed nanocarriers provide a platform for cerebrovascular targeting to inflamed brain, with the goal of normalizing the integrity of the blood-brain barrier, thus benefiting numerous brain pathologies.


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