Researchers develop new pathway to brain for medicine
Stumped for years by a natural filter in the body that allows few substances, including life-saving drugs, to enter the brain through the bloodstream, physicians who treat neurological diseases may soon have a new pathway to the organ via a technique developed by a physicist and an immunologist working together at Florida International University’s Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine.

The FIU researchers developed the technique to deliver and fully release the anti-HIV drug AZTTP into the brain, but their finding has the potential to also help patients who suffer from neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and epilepsy, as well as cancer.
“Anything where you have trouble getting drugs to the brain and releasing it, this opens so many opportunities,’’ said Madhavan Nair, an FIU professor and chair of the medical school’s immunology department.
In an in vitro laboratory test with HIV-infected cells, Nair and a colleague, Sakhrat Khizroev, a professor of immunology and electrical engineering, attached the antiretroviral drug AZTTP to tiny, magneto-electric nanoparticles. Then, using magnetic energy, they guided the drug across a cell membrane created in the lab to mimic the blood-brain barrier found in the human body.
Once the drug reached its target, researchers triggered its release from the nanoparticle by zapping it with a low-energy electrical current. The drug remained functional and structurally sound after the release, according to the experiment findings.
“We learned to control electrical forces in the brain using magnetics,’’ said Khizroev, who designed, oversaw and supervised the entire project. “We pretty much opened a pathway to the brain.’’
The test findings were published in April in the online peer-reviewed journal, Nature Communications. Researchers believe that using this method will allow physicians to send a higher level of AZTTP — up to 97 percent more — to HIV-infected cells in the brain.
Currently, more than 99 percent of the antiretroviral therapies used to treat HIV, such as AZTTP, are deposited in the liver, lungs and other organs before they reach the brain.
While anti-viral drugs have helped HIV patients live longer by reducing their viral loads, the drugs cannot pass the blood-brain barrier in significant amounts, which allows the virus to lurk unchecked in the brain and can lead to neurological damage, said Dr. Cheryl Holder, a practicing physician and FIU professor who specializes in treating patients with HIV.
“We know that even though the viral load is undetectable in the blood, we don’t know what’s going on in the brain fully,’’ Holder said.
HIV causes constant inflammation, she said, and the virus can pool in areas of the brain where medicine cannot reach, potentially causing damage.
“It’s important to get the drug to the brain,’’ she said, “to help prevent dementia in older patients, and inflammation.’’
But the ability to target drug delivery and release it on demand in the brain has been impossible without opening the skull, Nair and Khizroev said.
Nair, an immunologist who specializes in HIV research, and Khizroev, an electrical engineer and physicist, began collaborating on the project about 18 months ago after winning a National Institutes of Health grant to study the use of magnetic particles.
One of the keys to success was controlling the release of the drug without adversely affecting the brain.
The researchers found their solution in the magneto-electric nanoparticles, which are uniquely suited to deliver and release drugs in the brain, Khizroev said. These nanoparticles can convert magnetic energy into the electrical energy needed to release the drugs without creating heat, which could potentially harm the brain.
The development of a new, less invasive pathway to the brain would open the door to many new medical uses.
Khizroev said he recently returned from a trip to the University of Southern California, where he briefed physicians at the medical school on the technique and its potential for cancer treatment. And Nair said he received a letter recently on behalf of a 91-year-old man suffering from Parkinson’s, asking when the technique might become available for use in people.
That may take a while. With the first phase of testing successfully completed using in vitro experiments, the second will take place at Emory University in Georgia, where researchers will test the technique on monkeys infected with the HIV virus.
If researchers complete the second phase successfully, clinical trials on humans could follow, Nair said. Approval from the Food and Drug Administration would be required before the technique becomes commercially available, he said.
FIU researchers have applied for a patent and would receive royalties, they said, though the university would benefit the most, in part because a successful research project could open opportunities for more grant funding on other topics.
For Khizroev, who had previously done research on quantum computing and information processing, the project has offered a way to put his scientific knowledge to use in a way that could have a direct affect on people’s health.
“I wanted to apply my knowledge of nanoparticles to something important,’’ he said.
(Source: miamiherald.com)






![A tangle of talents untangles neurons
Brown’s growing programs in brain science and engineering come together in the lab of Diane Hoffman-Kim. In a recent paper, her group employed techniques ranging from semiconductor-style circuit patterning to rat cell culture to optimize the growth of nerve cells for applications such as reconstructive surgery.
Two wrongs don’t make a right, they say, but here’s how one tangle can straighten out another.
Diane Hoffman-Kim, associate professor of medicine in the Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Physiology, and Biotechnology, is an affiliate of both Brown’s Center for Biomedical Engineering and the Brown Institute for Brain Science. Every thread of expertise woven through those multidisciplinary titles mattered in the Hoffman-Kim lab’s most recent paper, led by graduate student Cristina Lopez-Fagundo.
In research published online last month in Acta Biomaterialia, Hoffman-Kim and Lopez-Fagundo employed their neurophysiological knowledge and technological ingenuity to unravel a tangle of branching, tendrilous nerve cells, or neurons.
The scientist-engineers helped explain how neurons grow in new tissues in response to physical guideposts, called Schwann cells. Their paper also provided medical device makers with an overt demonstration of how to craft the best artificial Schwann cell implants in silicone to make neurons grow as straight as possible in a desired direction.
“If you’ve got an injury in your arm or your leg then you’d like to have proper reconnection so you can get function,” Hoffman-Kim said. “If it’s a small injury, your body does that fairly well in natural ways that largely depend on the Schwann cells. If the injury gets even just a little bit large then the Schwann cells can’t do it alone.”
Silicone Schwanns
Hoffman-Kim and Lopez-Fagundo did not invent the idea of creating an implant to direct neural growth through repaired or reattached tissues. Their clinical goal is to make that technology the best it can be by systematically studying neural growth on Schwann-like substrates. As a matter of basic science, they wanted to learn how neural growth proceeds.
Lopez-Fagundo, whom Hoffman-Kim recruited for her lab in 2008 when she applied to Brown after graduating from the University of Puerto Rico, started the research with rigorous measurements of Schwann cells in cell cultures of rat neural tissue — the cell size, their elliptical shape, and the average distance between any two, as well as the length and width of the “processes” or wispy extensions that connect them.
“We were able to deconstruct the topography of Schwann cells,” said Lopez-Fagundo. “We were then able to manipulate it into different designs to better understand the influence this topography has.”
They came up with six archetypal designs. One of them mimicked the somewhat messy real-world layout of Schwann cells but the other five were arranged in neat horizontal rows. In one the elliptical Schwann cell bodies were few and far between. In another they were densely packed and in another their spacing was the exact average of Lopez-Fagundo’s measurements. Another design had no “processes” to connect the ellipses and another had only processes but no ellipses.
Using Brown’s microfabrication facility, Lopez-Fagundo patterned their designs on silicon wafers (like those used to make computer chips) and then transferred them to silicone squares about a centimeter on a side so that the ellipses and processes were in raised relief on the silicone. Then they put each pattern in a cell culture of rat neurons and watched them as the neurons grew across each pattern of artificial Schwann cells. As a control for their experiment, they also cultured cells on unpatterned silicone squares.
All of the patterns encouraged some directed neuron growth compared to the random growth of neurons on the unpatterned squares, but clearly some patterns did better than others.
After 17 hours, the two best patterns were the ones with only processes and the one with average ellipse spacing. The natural replica pattern and the one with only ellipses fared the worst.
But by day five, new winners emerged: the patterns where the ellipses were farther than average and nearer than average. Hoffman-Kim said she was surprised that the nerve cells didn’t remain content to follow the straightforward pattern of plain horizontal tracks formed by the process-only pattern. Meanwhile, to some extent, the neurons grew the proper way even without a continuous track at all, for instance in the ellipse-only pattern.
Lopez-Fagundo puzzled over the question of why the ellipses, also called “soma,” matter even as the neurons clearly also grow along the processes.
“I asked myself that question a lot and it wasn’t until I sat at the computer and looked at the [time lapse] videos over and over,” Lopez-Fagundo said. “They use the soma as anchor points. They jump from soma to soma and use the long axis of the soma to guide themselves.”
It’s as if the neurons navigated most effectively when they had both roads (processes) and rest stops (ellipses or soma) where they could get their bearings.
And thus the neurons made their way along the artificially optimized straight and narrow. To the researchers, who also included co-authors Jennifer Mitchel, Talisha Ramchal, and Yu-Ting Dingle, the experiments were a triumph of how the meticulous analytical control afforded by engineering can demystify a complex biological phenomenon.
“Sometimes when I give lectures I say, ‘Biomedical engineers are control freaks and we consider that a compliment,’” Hoffman-Kim said.](http://41.media.tumblr.com/36fc7efde99ed4daa6b938cb97a3b3ee/tumblr_mmfcr6lu8L1rog5d1o1_500.jpg)