A nanoparticle developed at Rice University and tested in
collaboration1 with Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) may bring great benefits to the emergency treatment of brain-injury victims, even those with mild injuries. Combined polyethylene glycol-hydrophilic carbon clusters (PEG-HCC), already being tested to enhance cancer treatment, are also
adept2(熟练的) antioxidants. In animal studies, injections of PEG-HCC during initial treatment after an injury helped restore balance to the brain's
vascular3 system(血管系统).
The results were reported this month in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano.
A PEG-HCC
infusion4 that quickly
stabilizes5 blood flow in the brain would be a significant advance for emergency care workers and battlefield medics, said Rice chemist and co-author James Tour.
"This might be a first line of
defense6 against reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are always overstimulated during a medical
trauma7, whether that be to an accident victim or an injured soldier," said Tour, Rice's T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and of computer science. "They're certainly
exacerbated8 when there's trauma with massive blood loss."
In a traumatic brain injury, cells release an excessive amount of an ROS known as superoxide (SO) into the blood. Superoxides are
toxic10 free
radicals12,
molecules14 with one unpaired electron, that the immune system normally uses to kill invading microorganisms. Healthy organisms balance SO with superoxide dismutase (SOD), an
enzyme15 that
neutralizes16 it. But even mild brain trauma can release superoxides at levels that overwhelm the brain's natural defenses.
"Superoxide is the most
deleterious(有毒的) of the reactive oxygen species, as it's the
progenitor17(祖先,原著) of many of the others," Tour said. "If you don't deal with SO, it forms
peroxynitrite(过氧硝酸盐) and hydrogen peroxide. SO is the upstream
precursor18 to many of the downstream problems."
SO affects the autoregulatory
mechanism19 that manages the sensitive circulation system in the brain. Normally,
vessels20 dilate21 when blood pressure is low and
constrict22 when high to maintain an
equilibrium23, but a lack of regulation can lead to brain damage beyond what may have been caused by the initial trauma.
"There are many
facets24 of brain injury that ultimately determine how much damage there will be," said Thomas Kent, the paper's co-author, a BCM professor of neurology and chief of neurology at the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston. "One is the initial injury, and that's pretty much done in minutes. But a number of things that happen later often make things worse, and that's when we can intervene."
Kent cited as an example the second burst of free radicals that can occur after post-injury
resuscitation25. "That's what we can treat: the further injury that happens because of the necessity of restoring somebody's blood pressure, which provides oxygen that leads to more damaging free radicals."
In tests, the researchers found PEG-HCC nanoparticles immediately and completely
quenched27 superoxide activity and allowed the autoregulatory system to quickly
regain28 its balance. Tour said ROS molecules readily combine with PEG-HCCs, generating "an innocuous carbon double bond, so it's really
radical11 annihilation. There's no such mechanism in biology." While an SOD enzyme can alter only one superoxide
molecule13 at a time, a single PEG-HCC about the size of a large protein at 2-3 nanometers wide and 30-40 nanometers long can
quench26(熄灭) hundreds or thousands. "This is an occasion where a nano-sized package is doing something that no small drug or protein could do, underscoring the efficacy of active nano-based drugs."
"This is the most
remarkably29 effective thing I've ever seen," Kent said. "
Literally30 within minutes of injecting it, the
cerebral31 blood flow is back to normal, and we can keep it there with just a simple second injection. In the end, we've normalized the free radicals while preserving nitric
oxide9 (which is essential to autoregulation). These particles showed the antioxidant mechanism we had
previously32 identified as predictive of effectiveness."