Cholinergic Neuron Targeting Nanosystem Delivering Hybrid Peptide for Combinatorial Mitochondrial Therapy in Alzheimer’s Disease

Mitochondrial dysfunction in neurons has recently become a promising therapeutic target for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Regulation of dysfunctional mitochondria through multiple pathways rather than antioxidation monotherapy indicates synergistic therapeutic effects. Therefore, we developed a multifun...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS nano 2022-07, Vol.16 (7), p.11455-11472
Hauptverfasser: Qian, Kang, Bao, Xiaoyan, Li, Yixian, Wang, Pengzhen, Guo, Qian, Yang, Peng, Xu, Shuting, Yu, Fazhi, Meng, Ran, Cheng, Yunlong, Sheng, Dongyu, Cao, Jinxu, Xu, Minjun, Wu, Jing, Wang, Tianying, Wang, Yonghui, Xie, Qiong, Lu, Wei, Zhang, Qizhi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mitochondrial dysfunction in neurons has recently become a promising therapeutic target for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Regulation of dysfunctional mitochondria through multiple pathways rather than antioxidation monotherapy indicates synergistic therapeutic effects. Therefore, we developed a multifunctional hybrid peptide HNSS composed of antioxidant peptide SS31 and neuroprotective peptide S14G-Humanin. However, suitable peptide delivery systems with excellent loading capacity and effective at-site delivery are still absent. Herein, the nanoparticles made of citraconylation-modified poly­(ethylene glycol)-poly­(trimethylene carbonate) polymer (PEG-PTMC­(Cit)) exhibited desirable loading of HNSS peptide through electrostatic interactions. Meanwhile, based on fibroblast growth factor receptor 1­(FGFR1) overexpression in both the blood–brain barrier and cholinergic neuron, an FGFR1 ligand-FGL peptide was modified on the nanosystem (FGL-NP­(Cit)/HNSS) to achieve 4.8-fold enhanced accumulation in brain with preferred distribution into cholinergic neurons in the diseased region. The acid-sensitive property of the nanosystem facilitated lysosomal escape and intracellular drug release by charge switching, resulting in HNSS enrichment in mitochondria through directing of the SS31 part. FGL-NP­(Cit)/HNSS effectively rescued mitochondria dysfunction via the PGC-1α and STAT3 pathways, inhibited Aβ deposition and tau hyperphosphorylation, and ameliorated memory defects and cholinergic neuronal damage in 3xTg-AD mice. The work provides a potential platform for targeted cationic peptide delivery, harboring utility for peptide therapy in other neurodegenerative diseases.
ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.2c05795