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Nanomalaria

The Nanomalaria group is a joint unit affiliated with IBEC and the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), located in the Esther Koplowitz Centre near Hospital Clínic (Barcelona).

About


The current activity of the Nanomalaria group is focused on the development of nanomedicine-based systems to be applied to malaria prophylaxis, diagnosis and therapy.

Methods for the diagnosis of malaria can benefit from nanotools applied to the design of microfluidic-based devices for the accurate identification of the parasite’s strain, its precise infective load, and the relative content of the different stages of its life cycle, whose knowledge is essential for the administration of adequate therapies.

Malaria is arguably one of the main medical concerns worldwide because of the numbers of people affected, the severity of the disease and the complexity of the life cycle of its causative agent, the protist Plasmodium spp. The clinical, social and economic burden of malaria has led for the last 100 years to several waves of serious efforts to reach its control and eventual eradication, without success to this day.

With the advent of nanoscience, renewed hopes have appeared of finally obtaining the long sought-after magic bullet against malaria in the form of a nanovector for the targeted delivery of antimalarial drugs exclusively to Plasmodium-infected cells. Nanotechnology can also be applied to the discovery of new antimalarials through single-molecule manipulation approaches for the identification of novel drugs targeting essential molecular components of the parasite.

The benefits and drawbacks of these nanosystems have to be considered in different possible scenarios, including economy-related issues that are hampering the progress of nanotechnology-based medicines against malaria with the dubious argument that they are too expensive to be used in developing areas. Unfortunately, it is true that the application of nanoscience to infectious disease has been traditionally neglected, with most research resources overwhelmingly biased towards other pathologies more prominent in the developed world. Thus, extra ingenuity is demanded from us: malaria-oriented nanomedicines not only need to work spotless; they have to do so in a cost-efficient way because they will be deployed in low-income regions.

The Nanomalaria Group has consolidated its research focus on the development of targeted nanocarriers of antimalarial drugs through the refinement of the nanocapsule structure, its targeting elements, the encapsulated compounds, and the adaptation of this acquired know-how to other parasitic diseases like leishmaniasis.

1.1. Nanocapsule.

1.1.1. Liposomes. We have optimized our immunoliposome-mediated drug delivery to Plasmodium-infected red blood cells (pRBCs) and to non-infected red blood cells as a dual therapeutic/prophylactic antimalarial strategy. Our group has pioneered the use of red blood cells as antimalarial carriers, a strategy that confronts Plasmodium with drugs at the very moment of erythrocyte infection by the pathogen. Using this approach that provided excellent in vivo results where malaria-infected mice were freed of parasites and cured, we have developed new immunoliposomes carrying drug combinations for their targeted delivery to red blood cells and gametocytes, a transmission stage shared between humans and the Anopheles mosquito vector which is a preferred target of malaria eradication efforts.

1.1.2. Polymers. We explore the potential for oral administration formulations of polymeric nanocapsules, which combine into a single chemical structure drug encapsulating capacity, antimalarial activity, low unspecific toxicity, high biodegradability, specific targeting to pRBCs, and affordable synthesis cost.

1. 2. Targeting element.

1.2.1. Heparin. We have shown that heparin has a high binding specificity for pRBCs vs. non-infected red blood cells, a property that is being researched for new antimalarial targeted drug delivery strategies. Heparin exhibits also significant antimalarial capacity, against which no resistance has been described so far, a characteristic that could be harnessed to develop nanocarriers where heparin has a double role as a targeting element and as an antimalarial drug in itself. However, the potent anticoagulant activity of heparin imposes a concentration threshold in blood which hampers its medical use. To overcome this limitation we have explored the synthesis of chemically modified heparin forms maintaining a good antiplasmodial activity but with a reduced anticoagulant capacity.

1.2.2. DNA aptamers. We use the systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment to select DNA aptamers against pRBCs for nanovector targeting and for

1.3. Active principle.

1.3.1. New antimalarial targets. (i)We have identified, cloned and characterized the proteins constituting in Plasmodium the Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport (ESCRT), using molecular biology strategies and nanotechnological femtoinjection techniques in giant unilamellar vesicles, and we are currently exploring their potential as drug targets. (ii) We have identified the presence of aggregation-prone proteins in all stages of malaria parasites in both the human and the mosquito, suggesting that protein aggregates might have a functional role in Plasmodium, and be therefore a druggable target.

1.3.2. New antimalarial drugs. We have discovered the new antiplasmodial styrylpyridinium salt compound YAT2150, which has a number of properties that make it highly interesting as a potential new antimalarial drug, among them: (i) it targets (binds) all P. falciparum stages of the parasite in the vertebrate host and in the mosquito vector; (ii) it fluoresces when interacting with its molecular targets in Plasmodium cells, which makes it a theragnostic agent; (iii) unlike most other current antimalarial drugs which target products of one or a few genes, its presumed mode of action, the inhibition of protein aggregation in the parasite, likely targets multiple proteins, preventing a rapid resistance evolution by the pathogen, (iv) fast-acting drug without cross resistance to chloroquine and artemisinin; (v) it has a low in vitro IC50 below 100 nM against all P. falciparum blood stages, including gametocytes, which indicates its potential as transmission-blocking drug; (vi) it belongs to a chemical family where no other antimalarial has been described up to date, which will prevent the adaptation by the parasite of preexisting resistance mechanisms to currently used drugs (indeed, several chloroquine- and artemisinin-resistant strains are strongly sensitive to YAT2150); (vii) its synthesis is easy and rapid (only two steps), resulting in an attractive activity/cost ratio considering that its main clinical deployment would be in the low per capita income regions where malaria is endemic; (viii) it has a long shelf life (months in solution, years as dry powder) at room temperature. In vivo antimalarial assays are currently ongoing.

1.4. Target disease.

1.4.1. Adaptation to leishmaniasis of the knowledge gained in Plasmodium for the development of nanomedicines.

FIGURE 1. Top: female Anopheles gambiae mosquito. From: John Smart, A Handbook for the Identification of Insects of Medical Importance, British Museum, London, 1948. Bottom: Logo of the NANOpheles project (EURONANOMED III call) coordinated by the Nanomalaria Group.
FIGURE 2. Cover image of the PhD Thesis of Dr. Elisabet Martí Coma-Cros, Investigation of branched and linear polymers as oral delivery systems of antimalarial drugs. 2019. Universitat de Barcelona. Cover design by Mar Martí Coma-Cros.

Staff

Xavier Fernàndez-Busquets

Group Leader
+34 93 227 5400 ext 4581
xfernandezibecbarcelona.eu

Projects

NATIONAL PROJECTSFINANCERPI
PROTAGINforMAL Characterization of the activity of the protein aggregation inhibitor YAT2150 as new antimalarial drug mechanism (2022-2025)MICIU, Generación Conocimiento: Proyectos I+DXavier Fernández- Busquets
DAMPA Development of a new generation of antimalarial drugs for the post-artemisinin era (2022-2024)MICIU, Proyectos Pruebas de ConceptoXavier Fernández- Busquets
PRIVATELY-FUNDED PROJECTSFINANCERPI
CATMAL Compact Analytical Tool for robust MALaria decentralized diagnosis and community surveillance (2023-26)Obra Social La Caixa, CaixaResearch HealthXavier Fernández- Busquets
FINISHED PROJECTSFINANCERPI
Coated liposome nanocomplexes as drug delivery systems for treatment of leishmaniasis (2019-2023)Fundació La Marató de TV3Xavier Fernández- Busquets
Identificació de fraccions d’heparina com a noves teràpies antimalàriques (2016-2019)Bioiberica, S.A.Xavier Fernández- Busquets
IPANAT Investigación de la agregación proteica como nueva diana antimalárica (2019-2021)MICIU, Retos investigación: Proyectos I+DXavier Fernández-Busquets
NANOpheles Development of nanovectors for the targeted delivery in Anopheles mosquitoes of agents blocking transmission of Plasmodium parasites (2017-2021)EURONANOMED III: European innovative research & technological development projects in nanomedicineXavier Fernández- Busquets
PaMapDX · Pan-Malaria Aptamer-based Rapid Diagnostic Test (2020-2021)Obra Social La Caixa, CaixaimpulseElena Lantero
NANOMISSION Ingeniería de nanovectores para la liberación de fármacos antimaláricos a fases de transmisión de PlasmodiumMINECO, Retos investigación: Proyectos I+DXavier Fernández- Busquets
NANOMALNET Exploración de nuevas moléculas direccionadoras eficientes para la liberación de antimaláricosBiotechnology Programme, MINECO, Spain (BIO2011-25039)Xavier Fernández- Busquets
Amphoteric polyamidoamines as innovative tools to selectively direct antimalarial drugs towards Plasmodium-infected red blood cellsFundación CARIPLOXavier Fernández- Busquets

Publications

Equipment

  • Zeiss Primostar microscope
  • Shake ‘N’ Stack (Thermo Hybaid) hybridization oven
  • Rotatory evaporator RS 3000-V (Selecta)
  • Plasmodium falciparum cell cultures

Collaborations

  • Prof. Dario Anselmetti
    Universität Bielefeld, Germany. Single molecule force spectroscopy
  • Prof. Maria Antònia Busquets
    University of Barcelona, Spain
  • Prof. Elisabetta Ranucci
    Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
  • Prof. José Manuel Bautista
    Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
  • Dr. Matthias Rottmann
    Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland
  • Prof. Robert Sinden
    Imperial College London, UK
  • Dr. Israel Molina
    Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona
  • Prof. José Luis Serrano
    Instituto de Nanociencia de Aragón, Zaragoza
  • Prof. Johan Engbersen
    University of Twente, The Netherlands
  • Dr. Santiago Imperial
    University of Barcelona, Spain
  • Dr. Eduardo Prata Vilanova
    Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Exploration of sulfated polysaccharides of marine origin as antimalarials
  • Dr. Maria Manconi
    Università de Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy. Liposome technology
  • Dr. Krijn Paaijmans
    CRESIB, Barcelona, Spain
  • Dr. Ellen Faszewski
    Wheelock College, Boston, USA. Marine sponge cell adhesion
  • Prof. Bernard Degnan
    University of Brisbane, Australia
  • Dr. Francisco J. Muñoz
    Parc de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona, Spain. Amyloid diseases
  • Dr. Inga Siden-Kiamos
    FORTH Institute of Molecular Biology & Biotechnology, Greece. Development of the malaria parasite within the mosquito
  • Prof. Salvador Ventura
    Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain. Aggregative proteins
  • Dr. Juan José Valle-Delgado
    Aalto University, Helsinki, Finland. Atomic force microscopy
  • Prof. Mats Wahlgren
    Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Dr. Fatima Nogueira
    Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, Lisboa, Portugal. Antimalarial drug assays in Plasmodium-infected mosquitoes and mice. 
  • Dr. Christian Grandfils
    University of Liège, Belgium. Biomaterials research. 
  • Salvador Borros
    Institut Químic de Sarrià, Barcelona. Materials Chemistry 
  • Paula Gomes
    Universidade do Porto, Portugal. Development of new antimalarial drugs
  • José Antonio García Salcedo
    Instituto de Parasitología y Biomedicina “López-Neyra”, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Granada, SpainSynthesis of chitosan nanoparticles
  • Eva Baldrich
    Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona. Malaria diagnosis
  • Kim Williamson
    Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, USA. Basic biology of bacterial, viral, and parasite diseases
  • Teresa Sierra
    Instituto de Nanociencia de Aragón, Zaragoza, SpainDendrimer technology 
  • Jos Paulusse
    University of Twente, The Netherlands. Encapsulation of peptides in tailor-made multifunctionalized nanocarriers and polyamidoamine-derived nanogels 

News

IBEC researchers Benedetta Bolognesi, Xavier Fernàndez Busquets and Xavier Trepat have been selected in the CaixaResearch 2024 call to lead their own research projects. The grants will provide financial support for the scientists to carry out their research in key areas such as cancer, malaria and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Three IBEC researchers selected in the CaixaResearch 2024 call to lead health research projects

IBEC researchers Benedetta Bolognesi, Xavier Fernàndez Busquets and Xavier Trepat have been selected in the CaixaResearch 2024 call to lead their own research projects. The grants will provide financial support for the scientists to carry out their research in key areas such as cancer, malaria and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

A study led by IBEC and ISGlobal has demonstrated the antileishmanial potential of an antimalarial compound. Initially designed for malaria, this drug shows high efficacy against leishmaniasis, representing a unique and promising breakthrough for the treatment of both infections.

IBEC and ISGlobal scientists develop an innovative compound effective against malaria and leishmaniasis

A study led by IBEC and ISGlobal has demonstrated the antileishmanial potential of an antimalarial compound. Initially designed for malaria, this drug shows high efficacy against leishmaniasis, representing a unique and promising breakthrough for the treatment of both infections.

Malaria kills over 500,000 people every year. In the last three years, researchers within the NANOpheles Project worked on the development of nanovectors targeting Plasmodium parasites in the mosquito vector. Xavier Fernàndez-Busquets, coordinator of the EU-funded project, explains their advances in a new video.

Last advances of European nanomedicine against malaria explained in a new video

Malaria kills over 500,000 people every year. In the last three years, researchers within the NANOpheles Project worked on the development of nanovectors targeting Plasmodium parasites in the mosquito vector. Xavier Fernàndez-Busquets, coordinator of the EU-funded project, explains their advances in a new video.

According to the study, the strategy has the added advantage of targeting the transmissible phase of the parasite- the gametocyte. Encapsulating two drugs with different properties into nanovesicles surrounded by antibodies can greatly improve their delivery and efficacy, according to a study led by Xavier Fernández Busquets, director of the joint Nanomalaria unit at the Institute for Bionengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) and the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), an institution supported by ”la Caixa”. Combining two drugs that act through different mechanisms is one of the most efficient approaches currently used to treat malaria. However, differences in the drugs’ physichochemical properties (solubility, half-life, etc.) often affect treatment efficacy.

Nanovectors Could Improve the Combined Administration of Antimalarial Drugs

According to the study, the strategy has the added advantage of targeting the transmissible phase of the parasite- the gametocyte. Encapsulating two drugs with different properties into nanovesicles surrounded by antibodies can greatly improve their delivery and efficacy, according to a study led by Xavier Fernández Busquets, director of the joint Nanomalaria unit at the Institute for Bionengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) and the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), an institution supported by ”la Caixa”. Combining two drugs that act through different mechanisms is one of the most efficient approaches currently used to treat malaria. However, differences in the drugs’ physichochemical properties (solubility, half-life, etc.) often affect treatment efficacy.

Projects led by IBEC group leader Xavier Fernandez-Busquets and Associated Researcher Antonio Juarez have received funds from 2017’s La Marató de TV3 fundraising campaign. These and 34 other winning projects were announced at an awards ceremony tonight at the Academia de Ciencias Médicas de Cataluña y Baleares in Barcelona of the 2017 edition of the telethon, which was dedicated to infectious diseases. La Marató de TV3, together with Catalunya Ràdio, broadcasts its annual telethon to raise funds for scientific research into various diseases with a different theme each year. The 2017 edition of La Marató ran from December 17th until March 31st and raised €9,758,075 for the 36 projects and 55 teams awarded.

IBEC projects awarded Marato 2017 funding

Projects led by IBEC group leader Xavier Fernandez-Busquets and Associated Researcher Antonio Juarez have received funds from 2017’s La Marató de TV3 fundraising campaign. These and 34 other winning projects were announced at an awards ceremony tonight at the Academia de Ciencias Médicas de Cataluña y Baleares in Barcelona of the 2017 edition of the telethon, which was dedicated to infectious diseases. La Marató de TV3, together with Catalunya Ràdio, broadcasts its annual telethon to raise funds for scientific research into various diseases with a different theme each year. The 2017 edition of La Marató ran from December 17th until March 31st and raised €9,758,075 for the 36 projects and 55 teams awarded.

A study led by Xavier Fernández Busquets, director of the joint ISGlobal-IBEC Nanomalaria unit, describes an innovative approach to selectively eliminate red blood cells infected by Plasmodium falciparum, avoid their aggregation, and inhibit parasite growth. The strategy, based on the use of nanovesicles coated with antibodies that target a parasite protein, and loaded with an antimalarial drug, represents a promising alternative in the treatment of severe malaria.

Drug-loaded nanovectors covered with antibodies represent an innovative approach to combat malaria

A study led by Xavier Fernández Busquets, director of the joint ISGlobal-IBEC Nanomalaria unit, describes an innovative approach to selectively eliminate red blood cells infected by Plasmodium falciparum, avoid their aggregation, and inhibit parasite growth. The strategy, based on the use of nanovesicles coated with antibodies that target a parasite protein, and loaded with an antimalarial drug, represents a promising alternative in the treatment of severe malaria.

The Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) and the biotech firm Bioiberica have signed a partnership agreement to study the development of new compounds derived from heparin to combat malaria. The partnership, which was officially announced this morning at the BioSpain meeting in Bilbao, is based on the research undertaken by Dr Xavier Fernández-Busquets, head of IBEC and ISGlobal’s joint Nanomalaria unit, engaged in developing specific antimalaria therapies, and the R&D project of Bioiberica, world leader in heparin production, to seek new applications of this molecule. Every year malaria infects 200 million people worldwide and causes half a million deaths. For several decades it has been known that when the malaria parasite enters the bloodstream, it invades the liver cells to produce thousands of merozoites – a stage in the life cycle of the parasite – that enter into the circulation and infect red blood cells, managing to evade the immune system.

New strategies to combat malaria: heparin and nanomedicine

The Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) and the biotech firm Bioiberica have signed a partnership agreement to study the development of new compounds derived from heparin to combat malaria. The partnership, which was officially announced this morning at the BioSpain meeting in Bilbao, is based on the research undertaken by Dr Xavier Fernández-Busquets, head of IBEC and ISGlobal’s joint Nanomalaria unit, engaged in developing specific antimalaria therapies, and the R&D project of Bioiberica, world leader in heparin production, to seek new applications of this molecule. Every year malaria infects 200 million people worldwide and causes half a million deaths. For several decades it has been known that when the malaria parasite enters the bloodstream, it invades the liver cells to produce thousands of merozoites – a stage in the life cycle of the parasite – that enter into the circulation and infect red blood cells, managing to evade the immune system.

Researchers have found heparin-like molecules with reduced blood-thinning activity that can be used for therapeutic approaches against malaria – in sea cucumbers, red algae and marine sponges. Until now, heparin – which has been shown to have antimalarial activity and specific binding affinity for red blood cells infected with the Plasmodium malaria parasite – has not been explored for anti-malarial drug solutions due to its powerful anticoagulating activity. While heparin is able to block the cell adhesion of infected red blood cells to various host receptors and disrupt the growth of the pathogen, its downfall is that the quantities needed for malaria treatment would result in too much blood-thinning and bleeding. There’s also the potential risk of infection, since polysaccharides such as heparin tend to be obtained from mammals.

Looking to the ocean for malaria solutions

Researchers have found heparin-like molecules with reduced blood-thinning activity that can be used for therapeutic approaches against malaria – in sea cucumbers, red algae and marine sponges. Until now, heparin – which has been shown to have antimalarial activity and specific binding affinity for red blood cells infected with the Plasmodium malaria parasite – has not been explored for anti-malarial drug solutions due to its powerful anticoagulating activity. While heparin is able to block the cell adhesion of infected red blood cells to various host receptors and disrupt the growth of the pathogen, its downfall is that the quantities needed for malaria treatment would result in too much blood-thinning and bleeding. There’s also the potential risk of infection, since polysaccharides such as heparin tend to be obtained from mammals.

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