Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are heterogeneous, nano-sized vesicles that are shed into the blood and other body fluids, which disperse a variety of bioactive molecules (e.g., protein, mRNA, miRNA, DNA and lipids) to cellular targets over long and short...
Read More »Extracellular vesicles – Novel promising delivery systems for therapy of brain diseases
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-derived membrane vesicles virtually secreted by all cells, including brain cells. EVs are a major term that includes apoptotic bodies, microvesicles and exosomes. The release of EVs has been recognized as an important modulator in cross-talking ...
Read More »Ticket to Ride – Targeting Proteins to Exosomes for Brain Delivery
Targeting therapeutically relevant biomolecules to protected sites of the body, such as the brain, is a major challenge in the design of molecular therapies. Exosomes recently emerged as promising vehicles for targeted drug delivery, offering advantages such as good biocompatibility, ...
Read More »Engineered Exosomes as Vehicles for Biologically Active Proteins
Exosomes represent an attractive vehicle for the delivery of biomolecules. However, mechanisms for loading functional molecules into exosomes are relatively unexplored. Here we report the use of the evolutionarily conserved late-domain (L-domain) pathway as a mechanism for loading exogenous proteins ...
Read More »DNA sequences within glioma-derived exosomes can cross the intact blood-brain barrier
Tumor-cell-secreted extracellular vesicles (EVs) can cross the disrupted blood-brain barrier (BBB) into the bloodstream. However, in certain gliomas, the BBB remains intact, which might limit EVs release. To evaluate the ability of tumor-derived EVs to cross the BBB, researchers at ...
Read More »Extracellular vesicles of the blood-brain barrier
Extracellular vesicles (ECV), like exosomes, gained recently a lot of attention as potentially playing a significant role in neurodegenerative diseases, particularly in Aβ pathology. While there are a lot of reports on ECV/exosomes derived from a variety of cell types, ...
Read More »Exosomes as a potential novel therapeutic tools against neurodegenerative diseases
Exosomes are extracellular vesicles that can transfer biological information over long distances affecting normal and pathological processes throughout organism. It is known that very often composition and therapeutic properties of exosomes depends on cell type and its physiological state. Thus, ...
Read More »Exosomes as drug delivery vehicles for Parkinson’s disease therapy
Exosomes are naturally occurring nanosized vesicles that have attracted considerable attention as drug delivery vehicles in the past few years. Exosomes are comprised of natural lipid bilayers with the abundance of adhesive proteins that readily interact with cellular membranes. Researchers ...
Read More »Exosome Delivered Anticancer Drugs Across the Blood-Brain Barrier for Brain Cancer Therapy
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) essentially restricts therapeutic drugs from entering into the brain. This study tests the hypothesis that brain endothelial cell derived exosomes can deliver anticancer drug across the BBB for the treatment of brain cancer in a zebrafish ...
Read More »