Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B (Mar 2024)

Multidimensional autophagy nano-regulator boosts Alzheimer's disease treatment by improving both extra/intraneuronal homeostasis

  • Yixian Li,
  • Peng Yang,
  • Ran Meng,
  • Shuting Xu,
  • Lingling Zhou,
  • Kang Qian,
  • Pengzhen Wang,
  • Yunlong Cheng,
  • Dongyu Sheng,
  • Minjun Xu,
  • Tianying Wang,
  • Jing Wu,
  • Jinxu Cao,
  • Qizhi Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 1380 – 1399

Abstract

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Intraneuronal dysproteostasis and extraneuronal microenvironmental abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease (AD) collectively culminate in neuronal deterioration. In the context of AD, autophagy dysfunction, a multi-link obstacle involving autophagy downregulation and lysosome defects in neurons/microglia is highly implicated in intra/extraneuronal pathological processes. Therefore, multidimensional autophagy regulation strategies co-manipulating “autophagy induction” and “lysosome degradation” in dual targets (neuron and microglia) are more reliable for AD treatment. Accordingly, we designed an RP-1 peptide-modified reactive oxygen species (ROS)-responsive micelles (RT-NM) loading rapamycin or gypenoside XVII. Guided by RP-1 peptide, the ligand of receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE), RT-NM efficiently targeted neurons and microglia in AD-affected region. This nano-combination therapy activated the whole autophagy-lysosome pathway by autophagy induction (rapamycin) and lysosome improvement (gypenoside XVII), thus enhancing autophagic degradation of neurotoxic aggregates and inflammasomes, and promoting Aβ phagocytosis. Resultantly, it decreased aberrant protein burden, alleviated neuroinflammation, and eventually ameliorated memory defects in 3 × Tg-AD transgenic mice. Our research developed a multidimensional autophagy nano-regulator to boost the efficacy of autophagy-centered AD therapy.

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