Litcius/Paper detail

Engineered EVs designed to target diseases of the CNS

Lisa Nieland, Shadi Mahjoum, Emily Grandell, Koen Breyne, Xandra O. Breakefield

2023Journal of Controlled Release76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) are challenging to treat, mainly due to the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which restricts drugs in circulation from entering target regions in the brain. To address this issue extracellular vesicles (EVs) have gained increasing scientific interest as carriers able to cross the BBB with multiplex cargos. EVs are secreted by virtually every cell, and their escorted biomolecules are part of an intercellular information gateway between cells within the brain and with other organs. Scientists have undertaken efforts to safeguard the inherent features of EVs as therapeutic delivery vehicles, such as protecting and transferring functional cargo, as well as loading them with therapeutic small molecules, proteins, and oligonucleotides and targeting them to specific cell types for the treatment of CNS diseases. Here, we review current emerging approaches that engineer the EV surface and cargo to improve targeting and functional responses in the brain. We summarize existing applications of engineered EVs as a therapeutic delivery platform for brain diseases, some of which have been evaluated clinically.

Topics & Concepts

MicrovesiclesBlood–brain barrierNeuroscienceDrug deliveryCentral nervous systemMedicineBiologyNanotechnologymicroRNABiochemistryMaterials scienceGeneExtracellular vesicles in diseaseTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
Engineered EVs designed to target diseases of the CNS | Litcius