| Literature DB >> 31004666 |
Yanping Li1, Shiyun Pu1, Qinhui Liu2, Rui Li1, Jinhang Zhang1, Tong Wu1, Lei Chen1, Hong Li1, Xuping Yang1, Min Zou3, Jia Xiao4, Wen Xie5, Jinhan He6.
Abstract
Activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) contributes to the development of liver fibrosis. Because of a relatively small population of HSCs in the liver and the lack of specific membrane targeting proteins, HSC-targeted therapy remains a major clinical challenge. Here we first showed that a hallmark of activated HSC (aHSC) is their increased expression of integrin αvβ3. Thus we established sterically stable liposomes that contain the cyclic peptides (cRGDyK) with a high affinity to αvβ3 to achieve aHSC-specific delivery. Our results showed that the cRGDyK-guided liposomes were preferentially internalized by activated HSCs in vitro and in vivo, and the internalization was abolished by excess free cRGDyK or knockdown of αvβ3. In contrast, quiescent HSCs, hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, sinusoidal endothelial cells, or biliary cells showed minimal uptake of the cRGDyK-guided liposomes. When loaded with the hedgehog inhibitor vismodegib, the cRGDyK-guided liposomes inhibited hedgehog pathway signaling specifically in activated HSCs. Moreover, treatment of mice with vismodegib-loaded cRGDyK-liposomes markedly inhibited the fibrogenic phenotype in bile duct ligation- or thioacetamide-treated mice. We conclude that the cRGDyK-guided liposomes can specifically target the activated HSCs, but not quiescent HSCs. This nanoparticle system showed great promise to deliver therapeutic agents to aHSC to treat liver fibrosis.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatic stellate cells; Nanoparticle; Targeted delivery; Therapeutic agent
Year: 2019 PMID: 31004666 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2019.04.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776