Targeting nanoparticles across the blood-brain barrier with monoclonal antibodies
Review article, 2014

Development of therapeutics for brain disorders is one of the more difficult challenges to be overcome by the scientific community due to the inability of most molecules to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Antibody-conjugated nanoparticles are drug carriers that can be used to target encapsulated drugs to the brain endothelial cells and have proven to be very promising. They significantly improve the accumulation of the drug in pathological sites and decrease the undesirable side effect of drugs in healthy tissues. We review the systems that have demonstrated promising results in crossing the BBB through receptor-mediated endocytic mechanisms for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.

enable drug-delivery

alzheimers-disease

in-vivo

sterically stabilized liposomes

central-nervous-system

amyloid-beta peptide

rat-brain

antitransferrin receptor antibody

transferrin-receptor

gene-therapy

Author

J. A. Loureiro

University of Porto

Bárbara Gomes

University of Porto

M. A. N. Coelho

University of Porto

M. C. Pereira

University of Porto

Sandra Rocha

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Physical Chemistry

Nanomedicine

1743-5889 (ISSN) 1748-6963 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 5 709-722

Subject Categories

Biological Sciences

DOI

10.2217/NNM.14.27

More information

Latest update

7/14/2021