| Literature DB >> 29292038 |
Vladimir V Shuvaev1, Raisa Yu Kiseleva1, Evguenia Arguiri2, Carlos H Villa1, Silvia Muro3, Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou2, Radu V Stan4, Vladimir R Muzykantov5.
Abstract
Inflammatory mediators binding to Toll-Like receptors (TLR) induce an influx of superoxide anion in the ensuing endosomes. In endothelial cells, endosomal surplus of superoxide causes pro-inflammatory activation and TLR4 agonists act preferentially via caveolae-derived endosomes. To test the hypothesis that SOD delivery to caveolae may specifically inhibit this pathological pathway, we conjugated SOD with antibodies (Ab/SOD, size ~10nm) to plasmalemmal vesicle-associated protein (Plvap) that is specifically localized to endothelial caveolae in vivo and compared its effects to non-caveolar target CD31/PECAM-1. Plvap Ab/SOD bound to endothelial cells in culture with much lower efficacy than CD31 Ab/SOD, yet blocked the effects of LPS signaling with higher efficiency than CD31 Ab/SOD. Disruption of cholesterol-rich membrane domains by filipin inhibits Plvap Ab/SOD endocytosis and LPS signaling, implicating the caveolae-dependent pathway(s) in both processes. Both Ab/SOD conjugates targeted to Plvap and CD31 accumulated in the lungs after IV injection in mice, but the former more profoundly inhibited LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation and elevation of plasma level of interferon-beta and -gamma and interleukin-27. Taken together, these results indicate that targeted delivery of SOD to specific cellular compartments may offer effective, mechanistically precise interception of pro-inflammatory signaling mediated by reactive oxygen species.Entities:
Keywords: Caveolae; Endothelial cells; Intracellular delivery; Plasmalemmal vesicle-associated protein; Vascular immunotargeting
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29292038 PMCID: PMC5825285 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2017.12.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776