Abstract

Depression is a chronic mental disorder which threatens human health and lives. However, the treatment of depression remains challenging largely due to blood brain barrier (BBB), which restricts drugs from entering the brain, resulting in a poor distribution of antidepressants in the brain. In this work, a novel brain-targeted drug delivery system was developed based on borneol-modified PEGylated graphene oxide (GO-PEG-BO). GO-PEG-BO was characterized and proved to possess excellent biocompatibility. By incorporating borneol, GO-PEG-BO could penetrate BBB efficiently by opening tight junctions and inhibiting the efflux system of BBB. The targeted distribution of GO-PEG-BO in the brain was observed by an in vivo biodistribution study. Moreover, GO-PEG-BO exhibited a neuroprotective effect, which is beneficial to the treatment of depression. Ginsenoside Rg1 (GRg1), which can relieve depressive symptoms but difficult to cross BBB, was loaded to GO-PEG-BO for the therapy of depression. In depressive rats, GRg1/GO-PEG-BO improved stress-induced anhedonia, despair and anxiety, and comprehensively relieved the depressive symptoms. In conclusion, GO-PEG-BO could serve as a promising nanocarrier for brain-targeted drug delivery, and provide a new strategy for the therapy of depression.

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