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Извлечено: 997 / 997 (100.0%) Средняя confidence: 0.13
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NanoScript-Enabled Nonviral Transient Repression of Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog for Axonal Regeneration and Central Nervous System Injury Repair.

PMID: 41711373 · DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5c13020 · ACS nano, 2026 · Brandon Conklin, Yanting Liu, Sarah Nevins, Byeong-Gwan Song, Sy-Tsong Dean Chueng, Qiu Xiaowen, Sungyun Kim, Heyin Cheu
📄 Abstract

Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains a debilitating neurological disorder with limited therapeutic options, as existing treatments primarily address symptoms rather than address the complex interplay of cellular and molecular barriers to regeneration. These barriers collectively hinder functional recovery, including inhibitory glial scarring, chronic neuroinflammation, intrinsic neuronal regenerative deficits, and disruption of the blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB). To address these limitations, we developed NanoScript-PTEN (NS-PTEN), a nonviral nanoparticle platform that delivers synthetic transcription factors to transiently suppress phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) expression. PTEN negatively regulates the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling axis, which is a critical determinant of neuronal survival and axonal growth. By reducing PTEN levels, NS-PTEN derepresses this pro-survival pathway, promoting neuronal regeneration in the injured spinal cord. By integrating a DNA-binding domain targeting the PTEN promoter, a transcriptional repression module, and a nuclear localization signal onto a gold nanoparticle (AuNP) scaffold, NS-PTEN achieves transient control over PTEN repression, reactivating pro-regenerative signaling while minimizing the risks of tumorigenesis associated with permanent gene silencing. In a clinically relevant contusion SCI rat model, NS-PTEN induced a coordinated series of structural and microenvironmental improvements that collectively support spinal cord repair. Histologically, NS-PTEN enhanced axonal continuity and remyelination, as evidenced by denser NF-positive fibers and substantially greater MBP preservation than in both the injury and AuNP groups. Concurrently, NS-PTEN markedly attenuated astroglial and microglial reactivity, reducing GFAP

Confidence: 0.14 · 8 полей извлечено
Идентификация (6 полей)
Target
phosphatase and tensin homolog
1.00
Alt. target
PTEN
1.00
Protein family
protein tyrosine phosphatases
0.50
Functional class
dual specificity phosphatase
0.50
Subcellular loc.
0.00
Isoforms (metab/obesity)
0.00
Механизм действия (21 полей)
Mechanism
PTEN negatively regulates the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling axis
0.95
Mutations (obesity/lean)
0.00
Activity (obesity)
0.00
Activity temporal
0.00
Energy balance
0.00
Appetite
0.00
Fat metabolism
0.00
Lipolysis
0.00
Thermogenesis
0.00
Muscle metabolism
0.00
Inflammation
0.00
Glucose metabolism
0.00
AA metabolism
0.00
Hormonal pathways
0.00
Cell death
0.00
Adipocyte fibrosis
0.00
Upstream (biochem)
0.00
Upstream (physiol)
0.00
Downstream (biochem)
PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling axis
0.90
Downstream (physiol)
0.00
PTMs
0.00
Экспрессия (8 полей)
Tissue expression
0.00
In vitro
0.00
In vivo
In a clinically relevant contusion SCI rat model, NS-PTEN induced structural and microenvironmental improvements including enhanced axonal continuity, remyelination, and reduced astroglial and microglial reactivity.
0.90
In silico
0.00
Genetic association
0.00
Ex vivo
0.00
Animal model
Rat contusion SCI model
0.90
Diet/model
0.00
Клиника (11 полей)
Drug
0.00
Indication
0.00
Patient subgroups
0.00
Safety concerns
0.00
Off-target
0.00
Trial stage
0.00
Pharma competitors
0.00
AE severity
0.00
MOA weight loss
0.00
Endpoints
0.00
Approved
0.00