TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
8Total items
6ePosters
1Grant
1Seminar

Latest

GrantNeuroscience

Cartilage targeting exosomes for OA gene therapy and pain treatment

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
May 31, 2031

Project Summary Gene therapy has the potential to facilitate targeted expression of therapeutic proteins to promote cartilage regeneration in osteoarthritis (OA). The dense, avascular, aggrecan-glycosaminoglycan rich negatively charged cartilage, however, hinders their transport to reach chondrocytes in effective doses. While viral vector mediated gene delivery has shown promise, concerns over immunogenicity and tumorigenic side-effects persist. To address this, we have developed surface-modified cartilage-targeting MSC exosomes as non-viral carriers for gene therapy. MSC derived exosomes have intrinsic therapeutic potential as they can induce cartilage repair and are non-immunogenic, making them desirable for gene delivery. We have engineered charge-reversed cationic exosomes by anchoring cartilage targeting optimally charged arginine-rich cationic peptide (CPC) motifs into the anionic exosome bilayer (Exo-CPC) by using buffer pH as a charge-reversal switch. Exo-CPC use charge interactions to penetrate through the full thickness of arthritic cartilage (close to tidemark) and deliver the packaged genetic material cargo to chondrocytes residing in the deep tissue layers while native anionic exosomes cannot. They can also bind within the synovial joint, making them effective for OA pain relief gene therapy. Here we will engineer charge-reversed Exo-CPC for delivery of IL-1RA (receptor antagonist of interleukin-1) mRNA and NaV1.8 (voltage gated sodium channel 1.8) inhibitor siRNA to stimulate both disease modifying response and long-term pain relief with a one-time intra-articular dose. IL-1RA mRNA targets are in the chondrocytes and synovium cells; Nav1.8 expressing nerves innervate into synovium and subchondral bone in OA – sites that Exo-CPC can readily target. Aim 1 will engineer cartilage targeting Exo-CPC for delivery of IL- 1RA mRNA and Nav1.8 inhibitor siRNA. Their ability to deliver IL-1RA mRNA to chondrocytes and IL-1RA protein translation efficiency will be evaluated in-vitro. Exo-CPC-Na v1.8’s ability to reduce NaV1.8 bioactivity of sensory nerves will also be evaluated. In Aim 2, their distribution intra-articular (proximity to NaV1.8-positive nerves), extra-articular, and DRG and spinal cord using partial meniscectomy NaV1.8-tdTomato reporter mice OA models will be evaluated. Additionally, their dose dependent reduction on MMP activity, neuronal excitability and pain- related behaviors, and any immunogenicity will be assessed. Aim 3 will use the determined functional doses to study the long-term disease modifying and pain-relief effects of mono and combination therapy with Exo-CPC- IL-1RA and Exo-CPC-Nav1.8 in rescuing injury induced tissue structural damage as well as in reducing pain (weight bearing asymmetry) for up to one month following IA administration in early vs. late stages (intervention at 2 vs 6 weeks) of MMT (medial meniscectomy) induced OA rats. The project paves way for utilizing the intrinsic therapeutic potential of MSC Exosomes as viral-free, non-immunogenic carriers for OA gene therapy by employing cartilage as a drug depot. Cationic exosomes can be used to deliver other OA gene targets, and can be widely used for targeting other negatively charged tissues like meniscus, ligaments, discs, fracture callus etc.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The use of milk exosomes to increase the expression of SYNGAP1 expression in SYNGAP1 mice

Janos Zempleni
University of Nebraska
Mar 3, 2022
ePosterNeuroscience

Astrocyte signalling to neurons through exosomes

Chiara Cervetto, Mario Passalacqua, Fabio Pastorino, Mariateresa Tedesco, Katia Cortese, Diego Guidolin, Guido Maura, Luigi F. Agnati, Manuela Marcoli
ePosterNeuroscience

The effect of M1 and M2 polarized microglia-derived exosomes on neural stem cell differentiation

Çağla Kiser, Ceren P. Gönül, İlkcan Ercan, Defne Engür, Abdullah Kumral, Şermin Genç
ePosterNeuroscience

Inflammatory exosomes transfer danger signals and induce glial dysfunctional calcium dynamics in naïve spinal cultured explants

Christian Memo, Pietro Parisse, Loredana Casalis, Clara Ballerini, Laura Ballerini
ePosterNeuroscience

Assessment of neurorestorative properties of intranasally administered colostrum-derived exosomes in the periventricular leukomalacia model

Serife Beyza Türe, Ceren Perihan Gonul, Coskun Armagan, Yusuf Guducu, Bora Tastan, Funda Erdogan, Sermin Genc

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Characterization of exosomes isolated from glioblastoma (U-87) cells and their use as prophylactic in Alzheimer's disease

Büşra Yılmaz, Hizlan Hincal Agus, Nelisa Turkoglu

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

TFEB-loaded exosomes mediated autophagy induction in Alzheimer’s disease

Heewon Cho, Eunae Kim, Donggyu Jo

FENS Forum 2024

exosomes coverage

8 items

ePoster6
Grant1
Seminar1

Add content

Have a seminar, talk, or paper on exosomes? Post it so others working in this area can find it.

Post content
Domain

See exosomes content within Neuroscience.

View domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.