Ionic Liquid Coating‐Driven Nanoparticle Delivery to the Brain: Applications for NeuroHIV

Author:

Hamadani Christine M.1,Mahdi Fakhri2,Merrell Anya1,Flanders Jack1,Cao Ruofan2,Vashisth Priyavrat1,Dasanayake Gaya S.1,Darlington Donovan S.1,Singh Gagandeep1,Pride Mercedes C.1,Monroe Wake G.1,Taylor George R.1,Hunter Alysha N.1,Roman Gregg2,Paris Jason J.2,Tanner Eden E. L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry The University of Mississippi University MS 38677 USA

2. Department of BioMolecular Sciences The University of Mississippi University MS 38677 USA

Abstract

AbstractDelivering cargo to the central nervous system (CNS) remains a pharmacological challenge. For infectious diseases such as HIV, the CNS acts as a latent reservoir that is inadequately managed by systemic antiretrovirals (ARTs). ARTs thus cannot eradicate HIV, and given CNS infection, patients experience neurological deficits collectively referred to as “neuroHIV”. Herein, the development of bioinspired ionic liquid‐coated nanoparticles (IL‐NPs) for in situ hitchhiking on red blood cells (RBCs) is reported, which enables 48% brain delivery of intracarotid arterial‐ infused cargo. Moreover, IL choline trans‐2‐hexenoate (CA2HA 1:2) demonstrates preferential accumulation in parenchymal microglia over endothelial cells post‐delivery. This study further demonstrates successful loading of abacavir (ABC), an ART that is challenging to encapsulate, into IL‐NPs, and verifies retention of antiviral efficacy in vitro. IL‐NPs are not cytotoxic to primary human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and the CA2HA 1:2 coating itself confers notable anti‐viremic capacity. In addition, in vitro cell culture assays show markedly increased uptake of IL‐NPs into neural cells compared to bare PLGA nanoparticles. This work debuts bioinspired ionic liquids as promising nanoparticle coatings to assist CNS biodistribution and has the potential to revolutionize the delivery of cargos (i.e., drugs, viral vectors) through compartmental barriers such as the blood‐brain‐barrier (BBB).

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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