Literature DB >> 30421747

Red blood cell-derived nanovesicles for safe and efficient macrophage-targeted drug delivery in vivo.

Xue Wan1, Shi Zhang, Feng Wang, Wei Fan, Chenxi Wu, Kuirong Mao, Hongda Wang, Zheng Hu, Yong-Guang Yang, Tianmeng Sun.   

Abstract

Macrophage-targeted drug delivery has great therapeutic potential for the treatment of cancers and inflammatory diseases. There is also an unmet need for efficient and nontoxic means of in vivo macrophage depletion to determine the role of macrophages under normal and disease settings. Herein, we explored the potential of red blood cell (RBC)-derived nanovesicles (RDNVs) as drug nanocarriers to specifically deplete macrophages. We show that RDNVs are effective hydrophilic drug carriers and can effectively deliver drugs into macrophages both in vitro and in vivo. Nanovesicles derived from both wild-type mouse RBCs (WT-RDNVs) and CD47 KO mouse RBCs (KO-RDNVs) can encapsulate clodronate with good stability in PBS for long-term storage. However, KO-RDNVs were more efficiently engulfed by macrophages in vitro and more rapidly cleared in vivo than WT-RDNVs, indicating that CD47 also serves as a "don't eat me" molecule for RDNVs as it does for RBCs. Accordingly, clodronate-encapsulated KO-RDNVs (KO-RDNV/CLD) were significantly more toxic to mouse macrophages in vitro than drug-loaded WT-RDNVs (WT-RDNV/CLD). Furthermore, WT-RDNV/CLD showed prolonged accumulation in tissues (e.g., liver and lung) and macrophage depletion versus KO-RDNV/CLD. Importantly, RBC-derived nanovesicles are more biocompatible and less toxic in vivo than clodronate-encapsulated liposomes-the current gold-standard macrophage-depleting reagent. This study offers a useful strategy for macrophage-targeted drug delivery.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30421747     DOI: 10.1039/c8bm01258j

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomater Sci        ISSN: 2047-4830            Impact factor:   6.843


  4 in total

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Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev Nanomed Nanobiotechnol       Date:  2021-11-01

2.  Functionalized erythrocyte-derived optical nanoparticles to target ephrin-B2 ligands.

Authors:  Taylor Hanley; Rong Yin; Jenny Mac; Wenbin Tan; Bahman Anvari
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 3.170

3.  Red Blood Cell Membrane-Camouflaged Tedizolid Phosphate-Loaded PLGA Nanoparticles for Bacterial-Infection Therapy.

Authors:  Xinyi Wu; Yichen Li; Faisal Raza; Xuerui Wang; Shulei Zhang; Ruonan Rong; Mingfeng Qiu; Jing Su
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 6.321

4.  In Vitro Generation of Red Blood Cells from Stem Cell and Targeted Therapy.

Authors:  Ping Zhou; Mouna Ouchari; Yun Xue; Qinan Yin
Journal:  Cell Transplant       Date:  2020 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 4.064

  4 in total

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