THE EFFICIENCY OF ENCAPSULATION OF NUCLEIC ACIDS IN LIPID NANOPARTICLES FOR THE TREATMENT OF EYE DISEASES
Resumen
Background: Drug delivery systems have been developed to treat diseases associated with the eye.
However, one of the greatest challenges is to improve routes of administration, specifically the
periocular and intravitreal, have the blood-retinal barrier as the greatest impediment. Lipid
nanoparticles as a nucleic acid delivery system have been used as an alternative to treat ocular
diseases, since they can cross the ocular barrier and efficiently transfecting nucleic acids to various
cells of the eye. The size influences the transfection of genes, biological distribution, diffusion, and
cellular uptake, so there are several factors that influence the characterization of the desired size for
the nanoparticle. Several reported investigations vary in particle size and encapsulation efficiency,
and a relationship between these variables has not been reported so far. Therefore, we propose the
research question: What size of lipid nanoparticles targeting eye diseases has a higher encapsulation
efficiency depending on the type of encapsulated nucleic acid? Methods: We used a search strategy
to compare studies of nanomedicine systems aimed at eye diseases where the size of the
nanoparticles and the efficiency of encapsulation of genetic material are reported based on the
criteria of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews (PRISMA ScR 2020 guidelines). Results:
Out of the initial 5932, 169 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included to form the basis of
the analysis. Nanoparticles reported are composed mainly of PEG-modified lipids, cholesterol and
cationic lipids, that in combination with messenger or interference RNA, allows the formulation of a
nanoparticle with an encapsulation efficiency greater than 95%. The diseases treated mainly focus
on conditions related to the retina and cornea. Certain characteristics of nanoparticles increase
encapsulation efficiency, such as the size of the nanoparticle and the charge of the outer layer of the
nanoparticle, so it is essential to determine and further study the optimal characteristics to achieve
an effective treatment. Although nucleic acid-loaded lipid nanoparticles are a promising treatment
alternative, it still has some limitations
Colecciones
- Memoria en abstract [184]