Crossing the Blood-Brain Barrier: Advances in Nanoparticle Technology for Drug Delivery in Neuro-Oncology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Properties of Nanoparticles
2.1. Size and Charge of NPs
2.2. Ligands and Functional Groups
3. Nanoparticle Transport Mechanisms
3.1. Adsorptive- and Receptor-Mediated Transcytosis
3.2. BBB Disruption to Improve NP Permeability
4. Types of NPs
4.1. Polymeric NPs
4.2. Liposomes and Solid Lipid NPs
4.3. Dendrimers
4.4. Inorganic Metals
4.5. Quantum Dots
4.6. Nanogels
5. NPs in Neuro-Oncology
6. Limitations and Future Directions
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AMT | Adsorptive-mediated transcytosis |
BBB | Blood-brain barrier |
BBTB | Blood-brain tumor barrier |
CNS | Central nervous system |
FUS | Focused ultrasound |
GNP | Gold nanoparticle |
LDL | Low-density lipoprotein |
MRI | Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
NP | Nanoparticle |
PBCA | Poly(butyl cyanoacrylate) |
PEG | Polyethylene glycol |
PLA | Poly(lactic acid) |
QD | Quantum dots |
RES | Reticuloendothelial system |
RMT | Receptor-mediated transport |
SLN | Solid lipid nanoparticle |
TAT | Transactivator of transcription |
Tf | Transferrin receptor |
TfR | Transferring receptor |
TJ | Tight junction |
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Nanoparticle Category | Advantages | Chemotherapeutics | References |
---|---|---|---|
Polymeric | Stability, biodegradability, biocompatibility, ease of manufacturing, hydrophobic and hydrophilic drug transport, non-immunogenic, low toxicity | 3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea | [130,131] |
Doxorubicin | [132,133] | ||
Methotrexate | [134] | ||
Temozolomide | [135] | ||
Gemcitabine | [136] | ||
Paclitaxel | [137] | ||
Liposome | Hydrophobic and hydrophilic drug transport, biocompatible, low toxicity | Doxorubicin | [120] |
Methotrexate | [138] | ||
Cisplatin | [139] | ||
Irinotecan | [140,141] | ||
Topotecan | [142] | ||
Paclitaxel | [143] | ||
Dendrimer | High molecular uniformity, monodispersity, kinetic stability, abundant free functional groups, low toxicity | Methotrexate | [144] |
Doxorubicin | [145,146] | ||
Temozolomide | [147] | ||
Docetaxel | [148] | ||
Arsenic trioxide | [149] | ||
Metallic | Contrast imaging agents, surface is readily modifiable, inflammatory cascade increases BBB permeability, hyperthermic effect increases BBB permeability and damage tumors | Doxorubicin | [150,151,152] |
Cisplatin | [153] | ||
Paclitaxel | [154] | ||
Quantum dots | Photoluminescent, photostability, tunable emission/excitation spectra, visualization of individual molecules, readily monitor drug delivery, low toxicity | Topotecan | [155] |
Doxorubicin | [156] | ||
Temozolomide | [157] | ||
Nanogels | Serum stability, uniformity, fluid-like transport properties, bioadehsive, biocompatible, biodegradable, deformable, stimulus-responsive release, low toxicity | Doxorubicin | [158] |
Cisplatin | [159] | ||
Methotrexate | [160] | ||
Paclitaxel | [161] |
NP Category | Size (nm) | Functional Components | Model | Results | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liposome + QD | 182 | Docetaxel (chemo), QD (imaging), transferrin (targeting) | Rats | Sustained drug release >72 h | [270] |
Carbon Dots | 6–8 | Highly crystalline carbon nanodot (photoacoustic imaging and photothermal therapy) | Mice (U87 glioma cells) | NPs accumulate in tumor cells and image-guided near-infrared-activated photothermal therapy can damage tumor tissue. | [271] |
Magnetic NP | 12 | Epirubicin (chemo), Fe3O4 core (contrast imaging) | Rat (C6 glioma cells) | FUS can improve uptake across the BBB, magnetic targeting improves tumor targeting, and MRI can monitor magnetic NP distribution. | [272] |
Silica NP | __ | Doxorubicin (chemo), Cu2 − x Se NP (photoacoustic imaging) | Mice (U87 glioma cells) | FUS can improve uptake across the BBB for tumor-specific targeting and the NPs show contrast enhancement on imaging. | [273] |
GNP | 56 | Doxorubicin (chemo), Cy5.5 (probe), RRGD peptide (targeting) | Mice (C6 glioma cells) | Effective uptake by glioma cells with co-localization and fluorescent detection of Cy5.5 | [268] |
Gold + iron oxide-loaded micelle | 100 | Iron oxide (MRI contrast agent), GNP (radiosensitizer) | Mice (U251 GBM cells) | Effective contrast agent for MRI and can show tumor borders of glioblastoma, radiosensitization increases tumor damage from radiation therapy | [274] |
Iron oxide NP | 43 | Iron oxide (MRI contrast agent), IL1- receptor antagonist (anti-edema agent) | Rats (C6 glioma cells) | IL-1 receptor antagonist reduces peritumoral edema and improves survival, enhanced MRI imaging of tumor | [275] |
Iron oxide NP | 37 | Iron oxide (MRI contrast agent), Small interfering RNA (gene therapy), temozolomide (chemo) | Mice (T98G GBM cells) | Gene therapy can reduce glioblastoma resistance to temozolomide, therapeutic response can be monitored on MRI | [276] |
Iron oxide NP | 184 | Iron oxide (MRI contrast agent), doxorubicin (chemo) | C6 glioma cells | MRI showed NP accumulation in tumor cells | [277] |
Gadolinium-based NP | 120 | Chlorin e6 (photosensitizer), gadolinium (MRI contrast agent) | Mice (C6 glioma cells) | Photodynamic therapy targeted tumor cells, NPs showed contrast enhancement on MRI | [278] |
Polymeric NP | 40–70 | Doxorubicin (chemo), gadolinium or Hoechst 33342 (imaging agents) | Mice (breast cancer metastasis line) | MRI and fluorescence microscopy confirmed delivery of imaging agents across the BBB, doxorubicin induced apoptosis in metastatic cells | [279] |
Polymeric NP | 10–200 | Iron oxide (MRI contrast agent), Photofrin (photosensitizer), F3 peptide (targeting) | Rat (9 L glioma cells) | Photodynamic therapy increased survival time, MRI detected NPs in tumor cells | [280] |
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Hersh, A.M.; Alomari, S.; Tyler, B.M. Crossing the Blood-Brain Barrier: Advances in Nanoparticle Technology for Drug Delivery in Neuro-Oncology. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 4153. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084153
Hersh AM, Alomari S, Tyler BM. Crossing the Blood-Brain Barrier: Advances in Nanoparticle Technology for Drug Delivery in Neuro-Oncology. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(8):4153. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084153
Chicago/Turabian StyleHersh, Andrew M., Safwan Alomari, and Betty M. Tyler. 2022. "Crossing the Blood-Brain Barrier: Advances in Nanoparticle Technology for Drug Delivery in Neuro-Oncology" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 8: 4153. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084153
APA StyleHersh, A. M., Alomari, S., & Tyler, B. M. (2022). Crossing the Blood-Brain Barrier: Advances in Nanoparticle Technology for Drug Delivery in Neuro-Oncology. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(8), 4153. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084153