Reactive A1 Astrocyte-Targeted Nucleic Acid Nanoantiepileptic Drug Downregulating Adenosine Kinase to Rescue Endogenous Antiepileptic Pathway.

ACS applied materials & interfaces(2023)

Cited 0|Views8
No score
Abstract
Resistance to traditional antiepileptic drugs is a major challenge in chronic epilepsy treatment. MicroRNA-based gene therapy is a promising alternative but has demonstrated limited efficacy due to poor blood-brain barrier permeability, cellular uptake, and targeting efficiency. Adenosine is an endogenous antiseizure agent deficient in the epileptic brain due to elevated adenosine kinase (ADK) activity in reactive A1 astrocytes. We designed a nucleic acid nanoantiepileptic drug (tFNA-ADK@AS1) based on a tetrahedral framework nucleic acid (tFNA), carrying an antisense oligonucleotide targeting ADK (ADK) and A1 astrocyte-targeted peptide (AS1). This tFNA-ADK@AS1 construct effectively reduced brain ADK, increased brain adenosine, mitigated aberrant mossy fiber sprouting, and reduced the recurrent spontaneous epileptic spike frequency in a mouse model of chronic temporal lobe epilepsy. Further, the treatment did not induce any neurotoxicity or major organ damage. This work provides proof-of-concept for a novel antiepileptic drug delivery strategy and for endogenous adenosine as a promising target for gene-based modulation.
More
Translated text
Key words
kinase,astrocyte-targeted
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined