Harnessing exosomes for advanced osteoarthritis therapy

Exosomes are nanosized, lipid membrane vesicles secreted by cells, facilitating intercellular communication by transferring cargo from parent to recipient cells. This capability enables biological crosstalk across multiple tissues and cells. Extensive research has been conducted on their role in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nanoscale 2024-10, Vol.16 (41), p.19174-19191
Hauptverfasser: Selvadoss, Andrew, Baby, Helna M, Zhang, Hengli, Bajpayee, Ambika G
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container_end_page 19191
container_issue 41
container_start_page 19174
container_title Nanoscale
container_volume 16
creator Selvadoss, Andrew
Baby, Helna M
Zhang, Hengli
Bajpayee, Ambika G
description Exosomes are nanosized, lipid membrane vesicles secreted by cells, facilitating intercellular communication by transferring cargo from parent to recipient cells. This capability enables biological crosstalk across multiple tissues and cells. Extensive research has been conducted on their role in the pathogenesis of degenerative musculoskeletal diseases such as osteoarthritis (OA), a chronic and painful joint disease that particularly affects cartilage. Currently, no effective treatment exists for OA. Given that exosomes naturally modulate synovial joint inflammation and facilitate cartilage matrix synthesis, they are promising candidates as next generation nanocarriers for OA therapy. Recent advancements have focused on engineering exosomes through endogenous and exogenous approaches to enhance their joint retention, cartilage and chondrocyte targeting properties, and therapeutic content enrichment, further increasing their potential for OA drug delivery. Notably, charge-reversed exosomes that utilize electrostatic binding interactions with cartilage anionic aggrecan glycosaminoglycans have demonstrated the ability to penetrate the full thickness of early-stage arthritic cartilage tissue following intra-articular administration, maximizing their therapeutic potential. These exosomes offer a non-viral, naturally derived, cell-free carrier for OA drug and gene delivery applications. Efforts to standardize exosome harvest, engineering, and property characterization methods, along with scaling up production, will facilitate more efficient and rapid clinical translation. This article reviews the current state-of-the-art, explores opportunities for exosomes as OA therapeutics, and identifies potential challenges in their clinical translation. Exosomes show promise as next-generation therapy for osteoarthritis (OA) due to their ability to modulate inflammation and cartilage synthesis. Recent advances in the engineering of exosomes have enhanced their targeted therapeutic potential for OA.
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Notably, charge-reversed exosomes that utilize electrostatic binding interactions with cartilage anionic aggrecan glycosaminoglycans have demonstrated the ability to penetrate the full thickness of early-stage arthritic cartilage tissue following intra-articular administration, maximizing their therapeutic potential. These exosomes offer a non-viral, naturally derived, cell-free carrier for OA drug and gene delivery applications. Efforts to standardize exosome harvest, engineering, and property characterization methods, along with scaling up production, will facilitate more efficient and rapid clinical translation. This article reviews the current state-of-the-art, explores opportunities for exosomes as OA therapeutics, and identifies potential challenges in their clinical translation. Exosomes show promise as next-generation therapy for osteoarthritis (OA) due to their ability to modulate inflammation and cartilage synthesis. 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source MEDLINE; Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-
subjects Animals
Cartilage
Cartilage, Articular - metabolism
Cartilage, Articular - pathology
Chondrocytes - metabolism
Crosstalk
Drug carriers
Drug Carriers - chemistry
Drug Delivery Systems
Exosomes - chemistry
Exosomes - metabolism
Glycosaminoglycans
Humans
Lipids
Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis - metabolism
Osteoarthritis - pathology
Osteoarthritis - therapy
Pathogenesis
Synovial joints
title Harnessing exosomes for advanced osteoarthritis therapy
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