Treating brain diseases using systemic parenterally-administered protein therapeutics: Dysfunction of the brain barriers and potential strategies

The parenteral administration of protein therapeutics is increasingly gaining importance for the treatment of human diseases. However, the presence of practically impermeable blood–brain barriers greatly restricts access of such pharmaceutics to the brain. Treating brain disorders with proteins thus...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomaterials 2021-02, Vol.269, p.120461-120461, Article 120461
Hauptverfasser: Zaghmi, A., Drouin-Ouellet, J., Brambilla, D., Gauthier, M.A.
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container_title Biomaterials
container_volume 269
creator Zaghmi, A.
Drouin-Ouellet, J.
Brambilla, D.
Gauthier, M.A.
description The parenteral administration of protein therapeutics is increasingly gaining importance for the treatment of human diseases. However, the presence of practically impermeable blood–brain barriers greatly restricts access of such pharmaceutics to the brain. Treating brain disorders with proteins thus remains a great challenge, and the slow clinical translation of these therapeutics may be largely ascribed to the lack of appropriate brain delivery system. Exploring new approaches to deliver proteins to the brain by circumventing physiological barriers is thus of great interest. Moreover, parallel advances in the molecular neurosciences are important for better characterizing blood–brain interfaces, particularly under different pathological conditions (e.g., stroke, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and Alzheimer's disease). This review presents the current state of knowledge of the structure and the function of the main physiological barriers of the brain, the mechanisms of transport across these interfaces, as well as alterations to these concomitant with brain disorders. Further, the different strategies to promote protein delivery into the brain are presented, including the use of molecular Trojan horses, the formulation of nanosystems conjugated/loaded with proteins, protein-engineering technologies, the conjugation of proteins to polymers, and the modulation of intercellular junctions. Additionally, therapeutic approaches for brain diseases that do not involve targeting to the brain are presented (i.e., sink and scavenging mechanisms).
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120461
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Barriers
Brain
Drug delivery
Peptide
Protein
title Treating brain diseases using systemic parenterally-administered protein therapeutics: Dysfunction of the brain barriers and potential strategies
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