Current strategies for the mass administration of antimalarial drugs demand oral formulations to target the asexual Plasmodium stages in the peripheral bloodstream, whereas recommendations for future interventions stress the importance of also targeting the transmission stages of the parasite as it passes between humans and mosquitoes. Orally administered polyamidoamine (PAA) nanoparticles conjugated to chloroquine reached the blood circulation and cured Plasmodium yoelii-infected mice, slightly improving the activity of the free drug and inducing in the animals immunity against malaria. Liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry analysis of affinity chromatography-purified PAA ligands suggested a high adhesiveness of PAAs to Plasmodium falciparum proteins, which might be the mechanism responsible for the preferential binding of PAAs to Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes vs. non-infected red blood cells. The weak antimalarial activity of some PAAs was found to operate through inhibition of parasite invasion, whereas the observed polymer intake by macrophages indicated a potential of PAAs for the treatment of certain coinfections such as Plasmodium and Leishmania. When fluorescein-labeled PAAs were fed to females of the malaria mosquito vectors Anopheles atroparvus and Anopheles gambiae, persistent fluorescence was observed in the midgut and in other insect’s tissues. These results present PAAs as a versatile platform for the encapsulation of orally administered antimalarial drugs and for direct administration of antimalarials to mosquitoes, targeting mosquito stages of Plasmodium.

Polyamidoamine Nanoparticles for the Oral Administration of Antimalarial Drugs / E. Ranucci, A. Manfredi, P. Ferruti, E. Martí Coma-Cros, A. Biosca, J. Marques, L. Carol, P. Urbán, D. Berenguer, C. Riera Maria, M. Delves, E. Sinden Robert, O. Valle-Delgado Juan, L. Spanos, I. Siden-Kiamosn, P. Pérez, K. Paaijmans, M. Rottmann, X. Fernàndez-Busquets. - In: PHARMACEUTICS. - ISSN 1999-4923. - 10:4(2018 Nov 11), pp. 225.1-225.20. [10.3390/pharmaceutics10040225]

Polyamidoamine Nanoparticles for the Oral Administration of Antimalarial Drugs

E. Ranucci
Investigation
;
A. Manfredi
Investigation
;
P. Ferruti
Conceptualization
;
2018

Abstract

Current strategies for the mass administration of antimalarial drugs demand oral formulations to target the asexual Plasmodium stages in the peripheral bloodstream, whereas recommendations for future interventions stress the importance of also targeting the transmission stages of the parasite as it passes between humans and mosquitoes. Orally administered polyamidoamine (PAA) nanoparticles conjugated to chloroquine reached the blood circulation and cured Plasmodium yoelii-infected mice, slightly improving the activity of the free drug and inducing in the animals immunity against malaria. Liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry analysis of affinity chromatography-purified PAA ligands suggested a high adhesiveness of PAAs to Plasmodium falciparum proteins, which might be the mechanism responsible for the preferential binding of PAAs to Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes vs. non-infected red blood cells. The weak antimalarial activity of some PAAs was found to operate through inhibition of parasite invasion, whereas the observed polymer intake by macrophages indicated a potential of PAAs for the treatment of certain coinfections such as Plasmodium and Leishmania. When fluorescein-labeled PAAs were fed to females of the malaria mosquito vectors Anopheles atroparvus and Anopheles gambiae, persistent fluorescence was observed in the midgut and in other insect’s tissues. These results present PAAs as a versatile platform for the encapsulation of orally administered antimalarial drugs and for direct administration of antimalarials to mosquitoes, targeting mosquito stages of Plasmodium.
English
Anopheles; antimalarial drugs; malaria; mosquitoes; nanomedicine; nanotechnology; Plasmodium; polymers; polyamidoamines; targeted drug delivery
Settore CHIM/04 - Chimica Industriale
Settore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico Applicativo
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
11-nov-2018
MDPI
10
4
225
1
20
20
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Polyamidoamine Nanoparticles for the Oral Administration of Antimalarial Drugs / E. Ranucci, A. Manfredi, P. Ferruti, E. Martí Coma-Cros, A. Biosca, J. Marques, L. Carol, P. Urbán, D. Berenguer, C. Riera Maria, M. Delves, E. Sinden Robert, O. Valle-Delgado Juan, L. Spanos, I. Siden-Kiamosn, P. Pérez, K. Paaijmans, M. Rottmann, X. Fernàndez-Busquets. - In: PHARMACEUTICS. - ISSN 1999-4923. - 10:4(2018 Nov 11), pp. 225.1-225.20. [10.3390/pharmaceutics10040225]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
19
262
Article (author)
no
E. Ranucci, A. Manfredi, P. Ferruti, E. Martí Coma-Cros, A. Biosca, J. Marques, L. Carol, P. Urbán, D. Berenguer, C. Riera Maria, M. Delves, E. Sinden Robert, O. Valle-Delgado Juan, L. Spanos, I. Siden-Kiamosn, P. Pérez, K. Paaijmans, M. Rottmann, X. Fernàndez-Busquets
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/600979
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