Enhancing the Delivery of Amphotericin B Across the Blood Brain Barrier for Treatment of Cryptococcal Meningoencephalitis

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Background and Significance. Cryptococcus neoformans and C. gattii are encapsulated yeasts that cause chronic infections in both immunocompetent and immunosuppressed individuals and are responsible for over 625,000 deaths each year. Amphotericin B (AmB) has been the mainstay of treatment for cryptococcal menin- goencephalitis (CME). However, the significant mortality rate (~20%) in these patients treated with available an- tifungal agents indicates the need for better therapies. AmB is a relatively large molecule and does not effec- tively cross the blood brain barrier (BBB). Our goal is to develop formulations of AmB that will cross the BBB in concentrations capable of effectively eliminating fungal organisms from the brain tissue for treating CME. Hypotheses. BBB endothelial cells express transferrin receptor (TfR) at high levels to transport iron from the blood into the brain. A peptide (CRTIGPSVC) has been identified that mimics iron by binding to transferrin and could be used to target drugs to the brain. We have produced a mutant of streptavidin (SAm7) fused to the brain targeting peptide (BTP) CRTIGPSVC. This fusion protein (BTP-SAm7) binds to TfR. In addition, BTP- SAm7 complexed with biotinylated AmB* (BTP-SAm7-[AmB*]) is effective against C. neoformans in vitro, crosses BBB in vitro, and reduces brain CFUs in murine CME. We hypothesize that a fusion protein consisting of a biotin binding protein (e.g., streptavidin) and a BTP will transport AmB* into the brain. We further hypothe- size that brain-targeted AmB will have greater efficacy against CME. Finally, we hypothesize that targeting AmB to the brain will allow use of lower total doses and thus reduce concerns of AmB systemic toxicity. Specific Aims. 1) to optimize the transport and delivery of AmB across the BBB, 2) to determine the anti- cryptococcal activity of novel AmB analogs, 3) to determine the efficacy of brain-targeted AmB in murine CME, and 4) to examine the toxicity of brain-targeted AmB. Work Proposed. For Aim 1, Individual components of the transporter BTP-SAm will be optimized in parallel. We will study other peptides as BTP and other monomeric variants of SA that have varying affinity for biotin. We will systematically test these second-generation molecules in vitro on hCMEC/D3 cell monolayers, which has been established as an in vitro model of the BBB, in comparison to CRTIGPSVC-SAm7 and irrelevant peptide controls. We will determine whether BTP-SAm7 can effectively deliver AmB* into the brain parenchyma in mice. In Aim 2, we will determine whether analogs of AmB and AmB linked to antifungal peptides that are synergistic with AmB have greater activity against C. neoformans and/or less toxicity. For Aim 3, we will determine efficacy of BTP-SAm-[AmB*] in mice with CME. For Aim 4, we will evaluate toxicity of BTP-SAm-[AmB*] compared to AmB in primary neuronal cell cultures and uninfected mice.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10265385
Project number
5I01BX003667-04
Recipient
VA GREATER LOS ANGELES HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
DAVID Owen BEENHOUWER
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2018-04-01 → 2022-03-31