Publication: Exosomal delivery of therapeutic modulators through the blood-brain barrier; promise and pitfalls
Files
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Eslami Abriz, Aysan
Zarebkohan, Amir
Rahbarghazi, Reza
Advisor
Publication Date
2021
Language
English
Type
Review
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Nowadays, a large population around the world, especially the elderly, suffers from neurological inflammatory and degenerative disorders/diseases. Current drug delivery strategies are facing different challenges because of the presence of the BBB, which limits the transport of various substances and cells to brain parenchyma. Additionally, the low rate of successful cell transplantation to the brain injury sites leads to efforts to find alternative therapies. Stem cell byproducts such as exosomes are touted as natural nano-drug carriers with 50-100 nm in diameter. These nano-sized particles could harbor and transfer a plethora of therapeutic agents and biological cargos to the brain. These nanoparticles would offer a solution to maintain paracrine cell-to-cell communications under healthy and inflammatory conditions. The main question is that the existence of the intact BBB could limit exosomal trafficking. Does BBB possess some molecular mechanisms that facilitate the exosomal delivery compared to the circulating cell? Although preliminary studies have shown that exosomes could cross the BBB, the exact molecular mechanism(s) beyond this phenomenon remains unclear. In this review, we tried to compile some facts about exosome delivery through the BBB and propose some mechanisms that regulate exosomal cross in pathological and physiological conditions.
Description
Source:
Cell and Bioscience
Publisher:
BioMed Central
Keywords:
Subject
Biochemistry, Molecular biology