Efficient Anti-Glioma Therapy Through the Brain-Targeted RVG15-Modified Liposomes Loading Paclitaxel-Cholesterol Complex.

Int J Nanomedicine

State Key Laboratory of Bioactive Substance and Function of Natural Medicines, Department of Pharmaceutics, Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Glioma is a challenging brain tumor to treat due to its poor survival rates and the difficulty of medication passing through the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which highlights the need for better drug delivery methods.
  • This study developed a brain-targeted liposome using RVG15 to enhance the delivery of paclitaxel (PTX), aiming to improve its effectiveness against glioma while ensuring better safety and targeting precision.
  • Results showed that the new liposome formula significantly increased drug accumulation in the brain and improved therapeutic effects in glioma models, ultimately demonstrating a notable reduction in tumor growth.

Article Abstract

Background: Glioma is the most common primary malignant brain tumor with a dreadful overall survival and high mortality. One of the most difficult challenges in clinical treatment is that most drugs hardly pass through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and achieve efficient accumulation at tumor sites. Thus, to circumvent this hurdle, developing an effectively traversing BBB drug delivery nanovehicle is of significant clinical importance. Rabies virus glycoprotein (RVG) is a derivative peptide that can specifically bind to nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) widely overexpressed on BBB and glioma cells for the invasion of rabies virus into the brain. Inspired by this, RVG has been demonstrated to potentiate drugs across the BBB, promote the permeability, and further enhance drug tumor-specific selectivity and penetration.

Methods: Here, we used the RVG15, rescreened from the well-known RVG29, to develop a brain-targeted liposome (RVG15-Lipo) for enhanced BBB permeability and tumor-specific delivery of paclitaxel (PTX). The paclitaxel-cholesterol complex (PTX-CHO) was prepared and then actively loaded into liposomes to acquire high entrapment efficiency (EE) and fine stability. Meanwhile, physicochemical properties, in vitro and in vivo delivery efficiency and therapeutic effect were investigated thoroughly.

Results: The particle size and zeta potential of PTX-CHO-RVG15-Lipo were 128.15 ± 1.63 nm and -15.55 ± 0.78 mV, respectively. Compared with free PTX, PTX-CHO-RVG15-Lipo exhibited excellent targeting efficiency and safety in HBMEC and C6 cells, and better transport efficiency across the BBB in vitro model. Furthermore, PTX-CHO-RVG15-Lipo could noticeably improve the accumulation of PTX in the brain, and then promote the chemotherapeutic drugs penetration in C6 orthotopic glioma based on in vivo imaging assays. The in vivo antitumor results indicated that PTX-CHO-RVG15-Lipo significantly inhibited glioma growth and metabasis, therefore improved survival rate of tumor-bearing mice with little adverse effect.

Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that the RVG15 was a promising brain-targeted specific ligands owing to the superior BBB penetration and tumor targeting ability. Based on the outstanding therapeutic effect both in vitro and in vivo, PTX-CHO-RVG15-Lipo was proved to be a potential delivery system for PTX to treat glioma in clinic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8403987PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S318266DOI Listing

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  • Results showed that the new liposome formula significantly increased drug accumulation in the brain and improved therapeutic effects in glioma models, ultimately demonstrating a notable reduction in tumor growth.
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