Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2025 May 6:111393. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2025.111393. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
This review deals with the application of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in the treatment of various neuropsychiatric disorders, including mood disorders, neurodegeneration, psychosis, neurological insults and injuries, epilepsy and substance use disorders. The main challenges of most neuropsychiatric pharmaceuticals nowadays are how to reach the central nervous system at therapeutic concentration and maintain it long enough and how to avoid undesirable side effects caused by unsatisfying toxicity. Extracellular vesicles, as very important mediators of intercellular communication, can have a variety of therapeutic qualities. They can act neuroprotective, regenerative and anti-inflammatory, but they also have characteristics of a good drug delivery system, including their nano- scale size, biological safety and abilities to cross BBB, to pack drugs within the lipid bilayer, and not to trigger an immunological response. Besides, due to their presence in readily accessible biofluids, they are good candidates for biomarkers of the disease, its progression and therapy response monitoring. Alternations in EVs’ cargo profiles can reflect the pathogenesis of neuropsychiatric disorders, but they could also affect the disease outcomes. In the future, EVs could help physicians to tailor treatment strategies for individual patients, however, more extensive studies are needed to standardize isolation, purification and production procedures, increase efficacy of drug loading and limit unwanted effects of innate EVs’ content.
PMID:40340017 | DOI:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2025.111393
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