| Literature DB >> 29869519 |
Jifu Hao1, Te Han1, Meixiang Wang2, Qiannan Zhuang1, Xiaodan Wang1, Jianguo Liu2, Yongan Wang2, Hua Tang2.
Abstract
Orchestration of nanoparticles to achieve targeting has become the mainstream for efficient delivery of antitumor drugs. However, the low delivery efficiency becomes the biggest barrier for clinical translation of cancer nanomedicines, as most of them are sequestrated in the liver where more macrophages located in are responsible for capture of systemic administrated nanoparticles. In this study, we found that the depletion of the liver macrophages could lead to a superior improvement in the nanoparticles delivery. Firstly, we developed clodronate-containing liposomes (clodrolip) to transiently suppress the phagocytic function of macrophages, the residual macrophages in liver only accounted for less than 1% when the mice were treated with clodrolip in advance. In addition, the pharmacokinetics results of treatment with paclitaxel-poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PTX-PLGA) nanoparticles disclosed that the AUC of PTX in the macrophages depletion group increased 2.11-fold. These results meant that the removal of macrophages would decrease the nanoparticles accumulation in the liver and better the biodistribution and bioavailability of nanoparticles delivery systems. Moreover, treatment of mice with melanoma by the combination of clodrolip and PTX-PLGA nanoparticles resulted in an elevated anti-tumor efficacy, the tumor inhibition ratio was nearly reached to 80%. Furthermore, these combinatorial regimens have demonstrated negligible toxicity in incidence of adverse effects. In conclusion, the encouraging results from this study inspire the generation of a rational strategy to focus on microenvironmental priming for modulation of innate immunity and to improve delivery efficiency of nanoparticles.Entities:
Keywords: Macrophages depletion; PLGA nanoparticles; antitumor effect; clodrolip; paclitaxel
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29869519 PMCID: PMC6058532 DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2018.1474965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv ISSN: 1071-7544 Impact factor: 6.419
Figure 1.The TEM morphology (A); particle size distribution (B); and in vitro drug release profiles (C) of clodrolip.
Figure 2.Evaluation of macrophages in the liver after intravenous injection of clodrolip. The flow cytometry analysis strategy of macrophages in the liver (A). The percentage of hepatic macrophages at various times (B). The flow cytometry analysis strategy of macrophages in the spleen (C). The percentage of splenic macrophages at various times (D).
Figure 3.The TEM morphology (A); particle size distribution (B); zeta potential (C); and in vitro drug release profiles (D) of PTX-PLGA.
Figure 4.Plasma concentrations versus time profile of PTX in mice with or without depletion of macrophages.
Pharmacokinetic parameters of PTX in depletion of macrophages group.
| Parameter | Depletion of macrophages | Control group |
|---|---|---|
| AUC0→∞ (mg/L h) | 11.04 ± 3.26* | 5.214 ± 1.23 |
| 90.55* | 191.79 | |
| 291.09 ± 12.7* | 525.95 ± 34.1 | |
| MRT (h) | 3.21 ± 0.13 | 2.74 ± 0.18 |
PTX: paclitaxel; AUC0→∞: area under the plasma concentration time curve from zero to infinity; CL: clearance; Vd: volume of distribution; MRT: mean residence time. Statistical significance compared with reference; *p < .05. Data are represented as the mean ± SD.
Figure 5.Drug distribution profile of PTX in mice with or without depletion of macrophages at various times.
Figure 6.In vivo antitumor performance of PTX-PLGA in B16 xenografted C57 mice with or without depletion of macrophages. Representative tumor tissues after treatment (A); average tumor weight at the experimental endpoint (B); tumor size over the treatment regimen (C); relative inhibition ratio of tumor growth (D).
Figure 7.Evaluation of drug-related toxicity. Change in body weight over the regimen (A); organ coefficients (B); hepatotoxicity analysis of serum markers such as lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), aspartate transaminase (AST), alanine transaminase (ALT), total bilirubin (TBIL), uric acid (UA), and creatinine levels (CRE) in mice (C).
Figure 8.Histopathologic examination of major organs after treatment (20×).