| Literature DB >> 33733490 |
Chao Ma1,2,3, Bo Li2, Jinrui Zhang2,4, Yao Sun2, Jingjing Li2, Hangcheng Zhou5, Jianlei Shen6,7, Rui Gu4, Jiangchao Qian5, Chunhai Fan6,7, Hongjie Zhang1,2, Kai Liu1,2.
Abstract
As a typical inflammatory disease with chronic pain syndromes, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) generally requires long-term treatment with frequent injection administration at 1-2 times per day, because common medications such as interleukin1 receptor antagonist (IL1ra) have poor bioavailability and very limited half-life residence. Here a novel strategy to fabricate nanotherapeutic formulations employing genetically engineered IL1ra protein complexes, yielding ultralong-lasting bioefficacy is developed rationally. Using rat models, it is shown that these nanotherapeutics significantly improved drug regimen to a single subcutaneous administration in a 14-day therapy, suggesting their extraordinary bioavailability and ultralong-acting pharmacokinetics. Specifically, the half-life and bioavailability of the nanoformulations are boosted to the level of 30 h and by 7 times, respectively, significantly greater than other systems. This new strategy thus holds great promise to potently improve patient compliance in RA therapy, and it can be adapted for other therapies that suffer similar drawbacks.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; nanoformulations; nanomedicine; protein engineering; rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33733490 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202100098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849