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Shuttle‐Mediated Nanoparticle Delivery to the Blood–Brain Barrier
Authors:Daniela Guarnieri  Annarita Falanga  Ornella Muscetti  Rossella Tarallo  Sabato Fusco  Massimiliano Galdiero  Stefania Galdiero  Paolo A Netti
Affiliation:1. Center for Advanced Biomaterials for Health Care@CRIB, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Largo Barsanti e Matteucci 53, 80125 Napoli and Interdisciplinary Research Centre on Biomaterials (CRIB) University of Naples Federico II, Piazzale Tecchio 80, 80125 Napoli, Italy;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Division of Biostructures and Centro Interuniversitario di Ricerca sui Peptidi Bioattivi ‐ University of Naples “Federico II”, Via Mezzocannone 16, 80134, Napoli, Italy;3. Department of Experimental Medicine ‐ II University of Naples, Via De Crecchio 7, 80138, Napoli, Italy
Abstract:Many therapeutic drugs are excluded from entering the brain due to their lack of transport through the blood–brain barrier (BBB). The development of new strategies for enhancing drug delivery to the brain is of great importance in diagnostics and therapeutics of central nervous diseases. To overcome this problem, a viral fusion peptide (gH625) derived from the glycoprotein gH of Herpes simplex virus type 1 is developed, which possesses several advantages including high cell translocation potency, absence of toxicity of the peptide itself, and the feasibility as an efficient carrier for delivering therapeutics. Therefore, it is hypothesized that brain delivery of nanoparticles conjugated with gH625 should be efficiently enhanced. The surface of fluorescent aminated polystyrene nanoparticles (NPs) is functionalized with gH625 via a covalent binding procedure, and the NP uptake mechanism and permeation across in vitro BBB models are studied. At early incubation times, the uptake of NPs with gH625 by brain endothelial cells is greater than that of the NPs without the peptide, and their intracellular motion is mainly characterized by a random walk behavior. Most importantly, gH625 peptide decreases NP intracellular accumulation as large aggregates and enhances the NP BBB crossing. In summary, these results establish that surface functionalization with gH625 may change NP fate by providing a good strategy for the design of promising carriers to deliver drugs across the BBB for the treatment of brain diseases.
Keywords:nanoparticles  drug delivery  peptides  blood–  brain barrier  uptake mechanisms
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