International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Aug 2022)

Bisdemethoxycurcumin (BDC)-Loaded H-Ferritin-Nanocages Mediate the Regulation of Inflammation in Alzheimer’s Disease Patients

  • Stella Gagliardi,
  • Marta Truffi,
  • Veronica Tinelli,
  • Maria Garofalo,
  • Cecilia Pandini,
  • Matteo Cotta Ramusino,
  • Giulia Perini,
  • Alfredo Costa,
  • Sara Negri,
  • Serena Mazzucchelli,
  • Arianna Bonizzi,
  • Leopoldo Sitia,
  • Maria Busacca,
  • Marta Sevieri,
  • Michela Mocchi,
  • Alessandra Ricciardi,
  • Davide Prosperi,
  • Fabio Corsi,
  • Cristina Cereda,
  • Carlo Morasso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23169237
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 16
p. 9237

Abstract

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Background: Bisdemethoxycurcumin (BDC) might be an inflammation inhibitor in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). However, BDC is almost insoluble in water, poorly absorbed by the organism, and degrades rapidly. We thus developed a new nanoformulation of BDC based on H-Ferritin nanocages (BDC-HFn). Methods: We tested the BDC-HFn solubility, stability, and ability to cross a blood–brain barrier (BBB) model. We tested the effect of BDC-HFn on AD and control (CTR) PBMCs to evaluate the transcriptomic profile by RNA-seq. Results: We developed a nanoformulation with a diameter of 12 nm to improve the solubility and stability. The comparison of the transcriptomics analyses between AD patients before and after BDC-HFn treatment showed a major number of DEG (2517). The pathway analysis showed that chemokines and macrophages activation differed between AD patients and controls after BDC-HFn treatment. BDC-HFn binds endothelial cells from the cerebral cortex and crosses through a BBB in vitro model. Conclusions: Our data showed how BDC-Hfn could improve the stability of BDC. Significant differences in genes associated with inflammation between the same patients before and after BDC-Hfn treatment have been found. Inflammatory genes that are upregulated between AD and CTR after BDC-HFn treatment are converted and downregulated, suggesting a possible therapeutic approach.

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