| Literature DB >> 31206942 |
Yue Zhang1, Yijie Chen1, Christopher Lo1, Jia Zhuang1, Pavimol Angsantikul1, Qiangzhe Zhang1, Xiaoli Wei1, Zhidong Zhou1, Marygorret Obonyo2, Ronnie H Fang1, Weiwei Gao1, Liangfang Zhang1.
Abstract
Anti-adhesion therapies interfere with the bacterial adhesion to the host and thus avoid direct disruption of bacterial cycles for killing, which may alleviate resistance development. Herein, an anti-adhesion nanomedicine platform is made by wrapping synthetic polymeric cores with bacterial outer membranes. The resulting bacterium-mimicking nanoparticles (denoted "OM-NPs") compete with source bacteria for binding to the host. The "top-down" fabrication of OM-NPs avoids the identification of the adhesins and bypasses the design of agonists targeting these adhesins. In this study, OM-NPs are made with the membrane of Helicobacter pylori and shown to bind with gastric epithelial cells (AGS cells). Treatment of AGS cells with OM-NPs reduces H. pylori adhesion and such anti-adhesion efficacy is dependent on OM-NP concentration and its dosing sequence.Entities:
Keywords: anti-adhesion; bacterial membranes; biomimetic nanoparticles; infectious diseases; nanomedicine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31206942 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201906280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336