Imaging approach to mechanistic study of nanoparticle interactions with the blood–brain barrier
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Bramini, Mattia; Ye, Dong; Hallerbach, Anna; Nic Raghnaill, Michelle; Salvati, Anna; Åberg, Christoffer; Dawson, Kenneth A.Editorial
American Chemical Society
Materia
Blood−brain barrier Nanoparticles Transcytosis
Fecha
2014-04-28Referencia bibliográfica
Bramini, Mattia et al. Imaging approach to mechanistic study of nanoparticle interactions with the blood–brain barrier. 2014, ACS nano 8 (5), 4304-4312. DOI: 10.1021/nn5018523
Patrocinador
EU FP7 (NNP4-SL-2008-214547), (NMP4-2010-EU-US-266737); Irish Government’s Programme for Research in Third Level Institutions INSPIRE; Science Foundation Ireland (09/RFP/MTR2425), (SFI/SRC/B1155 and 12/IA/1422); Marie-Curie Initial Training Network PathChooser (PITN-GA-2013-608373); ESF Research Networking Programme EpitopeMapResumen
Understanding nanoparticle interactions with the central nervous system, in particular the blood–brain barrier, is key to advances in therapeutics, as well as assessing the safety of nanoparticles. Challenges in achieving insights have been significant, even for relatively simple models. Here we use a combination of live cell imaging and computational analysis to directly study nanoparticle translocation across a human in vitro blood–brain barrier model. This approach allows us to identify and avoid problems in more conventional inferential in vitro measurements by identifying the catalogue of events of barrier internalization and translocation as they occur. Potentially this approach opens up the window of applicability of in vitro models, thereby enabling in depth mechanistic studies in the future. Model nanoparticles are used to illustrate the method. For those, we find that translocation, though rare, appears to take place. On the other hand, barrier uptake is efficient, and since barrier export is small, there is significant accumulation within the barrier.





