恶性疟原虫
阿托瓦库恩
药品
药理学
疟疾
药物输送
靶向给药
生物
抗药性
细胞外小泡
免疫学
化学
微生物学
细胞生物学
有机化学
作者
Lívia Neves Borgheti-Cardoso,Sander A.A. Kooijmans,Lucía Gutiérrez Chamorro,Arnau Biosca,Elena Lantero,Miriam Ramírez,Yunuen Avalos‐Padilla,Isabel Crespo,Irene Fernández,Carmen Fernández-Becerra,Hernando A. del Portillo,Xavier Fernández‐Busquets
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ijpharm.2020.119627
摘要
Among several factors behind drug resistance evolution in malaria is the challenge of administering overall doses that are not toxic for the patient but that, locally, are sufficiently high to rapidly kill the parasites. Thus, a crucial antimalarial strategy is the development of drug delivery systems capable of targeting antimalarial compounds to Plasmodium with high specificity. In the present study, extracellular vesicles (EVs) have been evaluated as a drug delivery system for the treatment of malaria. EVs derived from naive red blood cells (RBCs) and from Plasmodium falciparum-infected RBCs (pRBCs) were isolated by ultrafiltration followed by size exclusion chromatography. Lipidomic characterization showed that there were no significant qualitative differences between the lipidomic profiles of pRBC-derived EVs (pRBC-EVs) and RBC-derived EVs (RBC-EVs). Both EVs were taken up by RBCs and pRBCs, although pRBC-EVs were more efficiently internalized than RBC-EVs, which suggested their potential use as drug delivery vehicles for these cells. When loaded into pRBC-EVs, the antimalarial drugs atovaquone and tafenoquine inhibited in vitro P. falciparum growth more efficiently than their free drug counterparts, indicating that pRBC-EVs can potentially increase the efficacy of several small hydrophobic drugs used for the treatment of malaria.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI