Designer Extracellular Vesicles Modulate Pro‐Neuronal Cell Responses and Improve Intracranial Retention

Autor: Lilibeth Ortega‐Pineda, Alec Sunyecz, Ana I. Salazar‐Puerta, Maria Angelica Rincon‐Benavides, Diego Alzate‐Correa, Amrita Lakshmi Anaparthi, Elizabeth Guilfoyle, Louisa Mezache, Heather L. Struckman, Silvia Duarte‐Sanmiguel, Binbin Deng, David W. McComb, Daniel J. Dodd, William R. Lawrence, Jordan Moore, Jingjing Zhang, Eduardo Reátegui, Rengasayee Veeraraghavan, M. Tyler Nelson, Daniel Gallego‐Perez, Natalia Higuita‐Castro
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Adv Healthc Mater
ISSN: 2192-2659
2192-2640
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202100805
Popis: Gene/oligonucleotide therapies have emerged as a promising strategy for the treatment of different neurological conditions. However, current methodologies for the delivery of neurogenic/neurotrophic cargo to brain and nerve tissue are fraught with caveats, including reliance on viral vectors, potential toxicity, and immune/inflammatory responses. Moreover, delivery to the central nervous system is further compounded by the low permeability of the blood brain barrier. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as promising delivery vehicles for neurogenic/neurotrophic therapies, overcoming many of the limitations mentioned above. However, the manufacturing processes used for therapeutic EVs remain poorly understood. Here, we conducted a detailed study of the manufacturing process of neurogenic EVs by characterizing the nature of cargo and surface decoration, as well as the transfer dynamics across donor cells, EVs, and recipient cells. Neurogenic EVs loaded with Ascl1, Brn2, and Myt1l (ABM) are found to show enhanced neuron-specific tropism, modulate electrophysiological activity in neuronal cultures, and drive pro-neurogenic conversions/reprogramming. Moreover, murine studies demonstrate that surface decoration with glutamate receptors appears to mediate enhanced EV delivery to the brain. Altogether, the results indicate that ABM-loaded designer EVs can be a promising platform nanotechnology to drive pro-neuronal responses, and that surface functionalization with glutamate receptors can facilitate the deployment of EVs to the brain.
Databáze: OpenAIRE