Myricetin Oligomer Triggers Multi-Receptor Mediated Penetration and Autophagic Restoration of Blood-Brain Barrier for Ischemic Stroke Treatment.
Lei LiuZhifang MaQiaoyi HanWei MengHaozheng WangXinghua GuanQiang ShiPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
Restoration of blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, which drives worse outcomes of ischemic stroke, is a potential target for therapeutic opportunities, whereas a sealed BBB blocks the therapeutics entrance into the brain, making the BBB protection strategy paradoxical. Post ischemic stroke, hypoxia/hypoglycemia provokes the up-regulation of transmembrane glucose transporters and iron transporters due to multiple metabolic disorders, especially in brain endothelial cells. Herein, we develop a myricetin oligomer-derived nanostructure doped with Ce to bypass the BBB which is cointermediated by glucose transporters and iron transporters such as glucose transporters 1 (GLUT1), sodium/glucose cotransporters 1 (SGLT1), and transferrin(Tf) reporter (TfR). Moreover, it exhibits BBB restoration capacity by regulating the expression of tight junctions (TJs) through the activation of protective autophagy. The myricetin oligomers scaffold not only acts as targeting moiety but is the prominent active entity that inherits all diverse pharmacological activities of myricetin. The suppression of oxidative damage, M1 microglia activation, and inflammatory factors makes it a multitasking nanoagent with a single component as the scaffold, targeting domain and curative components.
Keyphrases
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- atrial fibrillation
- cell death
- blood glucose
- white matter
- type diabetes
- poor prognosis
- cancer therapy
- small molecule
- crispr cas
- signaling pathway
- spinal cord injury
- inflammatory response
- highly efficient
- single molecule
- brain injury
- neuropathic pain
- iron deficiency
- adipose tissue
- rectal cancer
- prognostic factors
- replacement therapy