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Dive into the research topics where Kun Shao is active.

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Featured researches published by Kun Shao.


Biomaterials | 2009

Gene delivery targeted to the brain using an Angiopep-conjugated polyethyleneglycol-modified polyamidoamine dendrimer

Weilun Ke; Kun Shao; Rongqin Huang; Liang Han; Yang Liu; Jianfeng Li; Yuyang Kuang; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang

Angiopep targeting to the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein-1 (LRP1) was identified to exhibit high transcytosis capacity and parenchymal accumulation. In this study, it was exploited as a ligand for effective brain-targeting gene delivery. Polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM) were modified with angiopep through bifunctional PEG, then complexed with DNA, yielding PAMAM-PEG-Angiopep/DNA nanoparticles (NPs). The angiopep-modified NPs were observed to be internalized by brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) through a clathrin- and caveolae-mediated energy-depending endocytosis, also partly through marcopinocytosis. Also, the cellular uptake of the angiopep-modified NPs were competed by angiopep-2, receptor-associated protein (RAP) and lactoferrin, indicating that LRP1-mediated endocytosis may be the main mechanism of cellular internalization of angiopep-modified NPs. And the angiopep-modified NPs showed higher efficiency in crossing blood-brain barrier (BBB) than unmodified NPs in an in vitro BBB model, and accumulated in brain more in vivo. The angiopep-modified NPs also showed higher efficiency in gene expressing in brain than the unmodified NPs. In conclusion, PAMAM-PEG-Angiopep showed great potential to be applied in designing brain-targeting drug delivery system.


Biomaterials | 2009

Brain-targeting gene delivery and cellular internalization mechanisms for modified rabies virus glycoprotein RVG29 nanoparticles

Yang Liu; Rongqin Huang; Liang Han; Weilun Ke; Kun Shao; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang

A 29 amino-acid peptide derived from the rabies virus glycoprotein (RVG29) was exploited as a ligand for efficient brain-targeting gene delivery. RVG29 was modified on polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM) through bifunctional PEG, then complexed with DNA, yielding PAMAM-PEG-RVG29/DNA nanoparticles (NPs). The NPs were observed to be uptaken by brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) through a clathrin and caveolae mediated energy-depending endocytosis. The specific cellular uptake can be inhibited by free RVG29 and GABA but not by nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAchR) agonists/antagonists, indicating RVG29 probably relates to the GABA(B) receptor besides nAchR reported previously. PAMAM-PEG-RVG29/DNA NPs showed higher blood-brain barrier (BBB)-crossing efficiency than PAMAM/DNA NPs in an in vitro BBB model. In vivo imaging showed that the NPs were preferably accumulated in brain. The report gene expression of the PAMAM-PEG-RVG29/DNA NPs was observed in brain, and significantly higher than unmodified NPs. Thus, PAMAM-PEG-RVG29 provides a safe and noninvasive approach for the gene delivery across the BBB.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2010

Angiopep-2 modified PE-PEG based polymeric micelles for amphotericin B delivery targeted to the brain.

Kun Shao; Rongqin Huang; Jianfeng Li; Liang Han; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang

Amphotericin B (AmB) is a poorly water soluble antibiotic and is used to treat fungal infections of the central nervous system (CNS). However, AmB shows poor penetration into the CNS. Angiopep-2, the ligand of low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) present on the BBB, exhibits higher transcytosis capacity and parenchymal accumulation, which allowed us to consider the selectivity of it for receptor-mediated drug targeting to the brain. With this in mind, we prepared angiopep-2 modified PE-PEG based micellar drug delivery system loaded with the antifungal drug AmB to evaluate the efficiency of AmB accumulating into the brain. PE-PEG based micelles as nano-scaled drug carriers were investigated by incorporating AmB with high drug entrapping efficiency, improving solubilization of AmB and reducing its toxicity to mammalian cells. The AmB-incorporated angiopep-2 modified micelles showed highest efficiency in penetrating across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) than unmodified micelles and Fungizone (deoxycholate amphotericin B) in vitro and in vivo. Meanwhile, contrary to the free Rho 123, the enhancement of Rho 123-incorporated angiopep-2 modified micelles across the BBB can be explained by angiopep-2 modified polymeric micelles that have a potential to overcome the activity of efflux proteins expressed on the BBB such as P-glycoprotein. In conclusion, angiopep-2 modified polymeric micelles could be developed as a novel drug delivery system for brain targeting.


Biomaterials | 2010

A leptin derived 30-amino-acid peptide modified pegylated poly-L-lysine dendrigraft for brain targeted gene delivery.

Yang Liu; Jianfeng Li; Kun Shao; Rongqin Huang; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang

The blood-brain barrier is the major obstacle that prevents diagnostic and therapeutic drugs being delivered to the central nervous systems in order to exert their effects. Specific ligand-receptor binding mediated endocytosis is one of the possible strategies to cross this barrier. A 30-amino-acid peptide (leptin30) derived from an endogenic hormone-leptin is exploited as brain-targeting ligand as it is reported to possess the same brain accumulation efficiency after intravenous injection. Dendrigraft poly-L-lysine (DGL) is used as non-viral gene vector in this study. DGL-PEG-Leptin30 was complexed with plasmid DNA yielding nanoparticles (NPs). The cellular uptake characteristic and mechanism were explored in brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) which express leptin receptors. Furthermore, brain parenchyma microglia cells such as BV-2 cells expressing leptin receptors could promote ligand-receptor mediated endocytosis leading to enhanced gene transfection ability of DGL-PEG-Leptin30/DNA NPs. The targeted NPs were proved to be transported across in vitro BBB model effectively and accumulate more in brains after i.v. resulting in a relatively high gene transfection efficiency both in vitro and in vivo. Besides, the NPs showed low cytotoxicity after in vitro transfection. Thus, DGL-PEG-Leptin30 provides a safe and noninvasive approach for the delivery of gene across the blood-brain barrier.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2009

Brain-targeting mechanisms of lactoferrin-modified DNA-loaded nanoparticles

Rongqin Huang; Weilun Ke; Liang Han; Yang Liu; Kun Shao; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang; Yuanying Pei

Ligand-mediated brain-targeting drug delivery is one of the focuses at present. Elucidation of exact targeting mechanisms serves to efficiently design these drug delivery systems. In our previous studies, lactoferrin (Lf) was successfully exploited as a brain-targeting ligand to modify cationic dendrimer-based nanoparticles (NPs). The mechanisms of Lf-modified NPs to the brain were systematically investigated in this study for the first time. The uptake of Lf-modified vectors and NPs by brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) was related to clathrin-dependent endocytosis, caveolae-mediated endocytosis, and macropinocytosis. The intracellular trafficking results showed that Lf-modified NPs could rapidly enter the acidic endolysosomal compartments within 5 mins and then partly escape within 30 mins. Both Lf-modified vectors and NPs showed higher blood–brain barrier-crossing efficiency than unmodified counterparts. All the results suggest that both receptor- and adsorptive-mediated mechanisms contribute to the cellular uptake of Lf-modified vectors and NPs. Enhanced brain-targeting delivery could be achieved through the synergistic effect of the macromolecular polymers and the ligand.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2013

T7 peptide-functionalized nanoparticles utilizing RNA interference for glioma dual targeting

Yuyang Kuang; Sai An; Yubo Guo; Shixian Huang; Kun Shao; Yang Liu; Jianfeng Li; Haojun Ma; Chen Jiang

Among all the malignant brain tumors, glioma is the deadliest and most common form with poor prognosis. Gene therapy is regarded as a promising way to halt the progress of the disease or even cure the tumor and RNA interference (RNAi) stands out. However, the existence of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood tumor barrier (BTB) limits the delivery of these therapeutic genes. In this work, the delivery system targeting to the transferrin (Tf) receptor highly expressed on both BBB and glioma was successfully synthesized and would not compete with endogenous Tf. U87 cells stably express luciferase were employed here to simulate tumor and the RNAi experiments in vitro and in vivo validated that the gene silencing activity was 2.17-fold higher with the targeting ligand modification. The dual-targeting gene delivery system exhibits a series of advantages, such as high efficiency, low toxicity, stability and high transaction efficiency, which may provide new opportunities in RNAi therapeutics and nanomedicine of brain tumors.


Nanotechnology | 2010

Evaluation and mechanism studies of PEGylated dendrigraft poly-L-lysines as novel gene delivery vectors

Rongqin Huang; Shuhuan Liu; Kun Shao; Liang Han; Weilun Ke; Yang Liu; Jianfeng Li; Shixian Huang; Chen Jiang

Dendrimers have attracted great interest in the field of gene delivery due to their synthetic controllability and excellent gene transfection efficiency. In this work, dendrigraft poly-L-lysines (DGLs) were evaluated as a novel gene vector for the first time. Derivatives of DGLs (generation 2 and 3) with different extents of PEGylation were successfully synthesized and used to compact pDNA as complexes. The result of gel retardation assay showed that pDNA could be effectively packed by all the vectors at a DGLs to pDNA weight ratio greater than 2. An increase in the PEGylation extent of vectors resulted in a decrease in the incorporation efficiency and cytotoxicity of complexes in 293 cells, which also decreased the zeta potential a little but did not affect the mean diameter of complexes. Higher generation of DGLs could mediate higher gene transfection in vitro. Confocal microscopy and cellular uptake inhibition studies demonstrated that caveolae-mediated process and macropinocytosis were involved in the cellular uptake of DGLs-based complexes. Also the results indicate that proper PEGylated DGLs could mediate efficient gene transfection, showing their potential as an alternate biodegradable vector in the field of nonviral gene delivery.


Biomaterials | 2011

Chlorotoxin-modified macromolecular contrast agent for MRI tumor diagnosis

Rongqin Huang; Liang Han; Jianfeng Li; Shuhuan Liu; Kun Shao; Yuyang Kuang; Xing Hu; Wang X; Hao Lei; Chen Jiang

Clinical diagnosis of cancers using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is highly dependent on contrast agents, especially for brain tumors which contain blood-brain barrier (BBB) at the early stage. However, currently mostly used low molecular weight contrast agents such as Gd-DTPA suffer from rapid renal clearance, non-specificity, and low contrast efficiency. The aim of this paper is to investigate the potential of a macromolecular MRI contrast agent based on dendrigraft poly-l-lysines (DGLs), using chlorotoxin (CTX) as a tumor-specific ligand. The contrast agent using CTX-modified conjugate as the main scaffold and Gd-DTPA as the payload was successfully synthesized. The results of fluorescent microscopy showed that the modification of CTX could markedly enhance the cellular uptake in C6 glioma and liver tumor cell lines, but not in normal cell line. Significantly increased accumulation of CTX-modified conjugate within glioma and liver tumor was further demonstrated in tumor-bearing nude mice using in vivo imaging system. The MRI results showed that the signal enhancement of mice treated with CTX-modified contrast reached peak level at 5 min for both glioma and liver tumor, 144.97% ± 19.54% and 158.69% ± 12.41%, respectively, significantly higher than that of unmodified counterpart and commercial control. And most importantly, the signal enhancement of CTX-modified contrast agent maintained much longer compared to that of controls, which might be useful for more exact diagnosis for tumors. CTX-modified dendrimer-based conjugate might be applied as an efficient MRI contrast agent for targeted and accurate tumor diagnosis. This finding is especially important for tumors such as brain glioma which is known hard to be diagnosed due to the presence of BBB.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2010

Lactoferrin-modified nanoparticles could mediate efficient gene delivery to the brain in vivo

Rongqin Huang; Weilun Ke; Liang Han; Yang Liu; Kun Shao; Chen Jiang; Yuanying Pei

Lactoferrin (Lf)-modified nanoparticles (NPs) have been demonstrated to mediate efficient expression of exogenous genes in the brain via intravenous administration. The brain-targeting properties of Lf-modified NPs were investigated in this study. In vivo imaging results showed that the accumulation of Lf-modified NPs was higher in the brain but lower in the other organs than that of unmodified counterparts. The results of analytical transmission electron microscopy showed that some Lf-modified NPs crossed the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and reached the neural tissues, while some remained within the BBB. Similar results were observed in the distribution of exogenous gene products. All the results demonstrated the successful delivery of Lf-modified NPs into the brain. Lf-modified NPs could be exploited as potential brain-targeting delivery systems for exogenous genes, especially for those encoding secretive proteins.


Advanced Materials | 2011

Choline‐Derivate‐Modified Nanoparticles for Brain‐Targeting Gene Delivery

Jianfeng Li; Lu Zhou; Deyong Ye; Shixian Huang; Kun Shao; Rongqin Huang; Liang Han; Yang Liu; Shuhuan Liu; Liya Ye; Jinning Lou; Chen Jiang

The major obstacle for drug delivery to the central nervous system (CNS) is the blood–brain barrier (BBB), which protects the CNS from potentially harmful xenobiotics and endogenous molecules to ensure an optimal environment for brain function. [ 1 ] Despite this natural barricade, small molecules and macromolecules including peptides and proteins could be transported into the CNS to maintain its normal physiological function via the endogenous BBB transporters. There are three families of endogenous BBB transporters: carrier-mediated transporters (CMT), active effl ux transporters (AET), and receptor-mediated transporters (RMT). The CMT and AET systems are mainly responsible for the transport of small molecules, while the RMT systems are responsible for endogenous large molecules. [ 2 , 3 ]

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Jinning Lou

China-Japan Friendship Hospital

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Liya Ye

China-Japan Friendship Hospital

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Yang Liu

Université Paris-Saclay

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