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L-Carnitine-conjugated nanoparticles to promote permeation across blood–brain barrier and to target glioma cells for drug delivery via the novel organic cation/carnitine transporter OCTN2

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posted on 2017-10-04, 05:30 authored by Longfa Kou, Yanxian Hou, Qing Yao, Weiling Guo, Gang Wang, Menglin Wang, Qiang Fu, Zhonggui He, Vadivel Ganapathy, Jin Sun

Overcoming blood–brain barrier (BBB) and targeting tumor cells are two key steps for glioma chemotherapy. By taking advantage of the specific expression of Na+-coupled carnitine transporter 2 (OCTN2) on both brain capillary endothelial cells and glioma cells, l-carnitine conjugated poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles (LC-PLGA NPs) were prepared to enable enhanced BBB permeation and glioma-cell targeting. Conjugation of l-carnitine significantly enhanced the uptake of PLGA nanoparticles in the BBB endothelial cell line hCMEC/D3 and the glioma cell line T98G. The uptake was dependent on Na+ and inhibited by the excessive free l-carnitine, suggesting involvement of OCTN2 in the process. In vivo mouse studies showed that LC-PLGA NPs resulted in high accumulation in the brain as indicated by the biodistribution and imaging assays. Furthermore, compared to Taxol and paclitaxel-loaded unmodified PLGA NPs, the drug-loaded LC-PLGA NPs showed improved anti-glioma efficacy in both 2D-cell and 3D-spheroid models. The PEG spacer length of the ligand attached to the nanoparticles was optimized, and the formulation with PEG1000 (LC-1000-PLGA NPs) showed the maximum targeting efficiency. We conclude that l-carnitine-mediated cellular recognition and internalization via OCTN2 significantly facilitate the transcytosis of nanoparticles across BBB and the uptake of nanoparticles in glioma cells, resulting in improved anti-glioma efficacy.

Funding

This work was financially supported by National Nature Science Foundation of China (No. 81473164, U1608283), National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program, No. 2015CB932100), and the Welch Endowed Chair in Biochemistry at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (No. BI-0028). The authors acknowledge the financial support from the China Scholarship Council in the form of a graduate fellowship to first author (No. 201508210200).

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