AI Article Synopsis

  • Central nervous system (CNS) disorders, particularly affecting the elderly, cause significant socioeconomic challenges due to symptoms like neurodegeneration and cognitive dysfunction, often stemming from genetic and environmental factors.
  • Current clinical treatments for CNS diseases, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, are limited by side effects and their inability to stop disease progression, highlighting the potential of gene therapy.
  • Non-viral vectors, especially nanoparticles (NPs), are emerging as a promising approach in gene therapy for CNS disorders, offering targeted delivery of drugs or genes while reducing systemic toxicity and side effects, with the review focusing on their role and associated challenges.

Article Abstract

Central nervous system (CNS) disorders account for boundless socioeconomic burdens with devastating effects among the population, especially the elderly. The major symptoms of these disorders are neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation, and cognitive dysfunction caused by inherited genetic mutations or by genetic and epigenetic changes due to injury, environmental factors, and disease-related events. Currently available clinical treatments for CNS diseases, i.e., Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, stroke, and brain tumor, have significant side effects and are largely unable to halt the clinical progression. So gene therapy displays a new paradigm in the treatment of these disorders with some modalities, varying from the suppression of endogenous genes to the expression of exogenous genes. Both viral and non-viral vectors are commonly used for gene therapy. Viral vectors are quite effective but associated with severe side effects, like immunogenicity and carcinogenicity, and poor target cell specificity. Thus, non-viral vectors, mainly nanotherapeutics like nanoparticles (NPs), turn out to be a realistic approach in gene therapy, achieving higher efficacy. NPs demonstrate a new avenue in pharmacotherapy for the delivery of drugs or genes to their selective cells or tissue, thus providing concentrated and constant drug delivery to targeted tissues, minimizing systemic toxicity and side effects. The current review will emphasize the role of NPs in mediating gene therapy for CNS disorders treatment. Moreover, the challenges and perspectives of NPs in gene therapy will be summarized.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867329666220105122318DOI Listing

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