Chemotactic synthetic vesicles: Design and applications in blood-brain barrier crossing

Author

Azizi, Juzaili

Joseph, Adrian

Contini, Claudia

Cecchin, Denis

Nyberg, Sophie

Ruiz-Perez, Lorena

Preston, Jane

Volpe, Giorgio

Battaglia, Giuseppe

Gaitzsch, Jens

Fullstone, Gavin

Tian, Xiaohe

Publication date

2025-09-03T15:06:22Z

2025-09-03T15:06:22Z

2017-08-02

2025-09-03T15:06:22Z

Abstract

In recent years, scientists have created artificial microscopic and nanoscopic self-propelling particles, often referred to as nano- or microswimmers, capable of mimicking biological locomotion and taxis. This active diffusion enables the engineering of complex operations that so far have not been possible at the micro- and nanoscale. One of the most promising tasks is the ability to engineer nanocarriers that can autonomously navigate within tissues and organs, accessing nearly every site of the human body guided by endogenous chemical gradients. We report a fully synthetic, organic, nanoscopic system that exhibits attractive chemotaxis driven by enzymatic conversion of glucose. We achieve this by encapsulating glucose oxidase alone or in combination with catalase into nanoscopic and biocompatible asymmetric polymer vesicles (known as polymersomes). We show that these vesicles self-propel in response to an external gradient of glucose by inducing a slip velocity on their surface, which makes them move in an extremely sensitive way toward higher-concentration regions. We finally demonstrate that the chemotactic behavior of these nanoswimmers, in combination with LRP-1 (low-density lipoprotein receptor–related protein 1) targeting, enables a fourfold increase in penetration to the brain compared to nonchemotactic systems.<span style="color:rgba( 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 )"> recent years, </span>

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Barrera hematoencefàlica; Polímers; Quimiotaxi; Blood-brain barrier; Polymers; Chemotaxis

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1700362

Science Advances, 2017

https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1700362

Rights

cc-by (c) Adrian J. et al., 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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