| Literature DB >> 33977080 |
Qi Qiao1, Xiong Liu1, Ting Yang1, Kexin Cui1, Li Kong1, Conglian Yang1, Zhiping Zhang1,2,3.
Abstract
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (<span class="Disease">ARDS) is characterized by the severe inflammation and destruction of the lung air-blood barrier, leading to irreversible and substantial respiratory function damage. Patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have been encountered with a high risk of ARDS, underscoring the urgency for exploiting effective therapy. However, proper medications for ARDS are still lacking due to poor pharmacokinetics, non-specific side effects, inability to surmount pulmonary barrier, and inadequate management of heterogeneity. The increased lung permeability in the pathological environment of ARDS may contribute to nanoparticle-mediated passive targeting delivery. Nanomedicine has demonstrated unique advantages in solving the dilemma of ARDS drug therapy, which can address the shortcomings and limitations of traditional anti-inflammatory or antioxidant drug treatment. Through passive, active, or physicochemical targeting, nanocarriers can interact with lung epithelium/endothelium and inflammatory cells to reverse abnormal changes and restore homeostasis of the pulmonary environment, thereby showing good therapeutic activity and reduced toxicity. This article reviews the latest applications of nanomedicine in pre-clinical ARDS therapy, highlights the strategies for targeted treatment of lung inflammation, presents the innovative drug delivery systems, and provides inspiration for strengthening the therapeutic effect of nanomedicine-based treatment.Entities:
Keywords: ACE2, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2; AEC II, alveolar type II epithelial cells; AM, alveolar macrophages; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; Acute lung injury; Acute respiratory distress syndrome; Anti-inflammatory therapy; BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; BSA, bovine serum albumin; CD, cyclodextrin; CLP, cecal ligation and perforation; COVID-19; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; DOPE, phosphatidylethanolamine; DOTAP, 1-diolefin-3-trimethylaminopropane; DOX, doxorubicin; DPPC, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; Drug delivery; ECM, extracellular matrix; ELVIS, Extravasation through Leaky Vasculature and subsequent Inflammatory cell-mediated Sequestration; EPCs, endothelial progenitor cells; EPR, enhanced permeability and retention; EVs, extracellular vesicles; EphA2, ephrin type-A receptor 2; Esbp, E-selectin-binding peptide; FcgR, Fcγ receptor; GNP, peptide-gold nanoparticle; H2O2, hydrogen peroxide; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule-1; IKK, IκB kinase; IL, interleukin; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MERS, Middle East respiratory syndrome; MPMVECs, mouse pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells; MPO, myeloperoxidase; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; NAC, N-acetylcysteine; NE, neutrophil elastase; NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; Nanomedicine; PC, phosphatidylcholine; PCB, poly(carboxybetaine); PDA, polydopamine; PDE4, phosphodiesterase 4; PECAM-1, platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule; PEG, poly(ethylene glycol); PEI, polyetherimide; PEVs, platelet-derived extracellular vesicles; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PS-PEG, poly(styrene-b-ethylene glycol); Pathophysiologic feature; RBC, red blood cells; RBD, receptor-binding domains; ROS, reactive oxygen species; S1PLyase, sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase; SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; SDC1, syndecan-1; SORT, selective organ targeting; SP, surfactant protein; Se, selenium; Siglec, sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin; TLR, toll-like receptor; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; TPP, triphenylphosphonium cation; Targeting strategy; YSA, YSAYPDSVPMMS; cRGD, cyclic arginine glycine-D-aspartic acid; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; rSPANb, anti-rat SP-A nanobody; scFv, single chain variable fragments
Year: 2021 PMID: 33977080 PMCID: PMC8102084 DOI: 10.1016/j.apsb.2021.04.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Pharm Sin B ISSN: 2211-3835 Impact factor: 11.413
Figure 1Pathophysiology of ARDS. Healthy lungs maintain a balance of gas change and substance transport, ascribing to the integrated structure and function of the air–blood barrier (the left sections). The air–blood barrier is mainly consisting of epithelium and endothelium barrier, where cells are lined up continuously and connected through intercellular junctions. Once injury or toxins stimulate, AM and AEC cells are initiated, secreting inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, and recruiting neutrophils to the inflamed lungs (the right sections). The activated neutrophils can release NETs and multiple proteases in response, while excessive productions can be harmful and induce lung edema. Various inflammatory cells may overproduce pro-inflammatory cytokines, ROS, and other inflammatory mediators, resulting in cytokine storms and severe lung injury. The inflammatory environment can damage the lung cells, dissolve the intercellular junctions, increase epithelium and vascular permeability, leading to the breakdown of epithelium and endothelium barrier. The impairment of lung barrier can prompt more extravasation of inflammatory cells into alveoli, which can exacerbate the inflammatory state and cause tissue damage, forming a vicious circle between inflammation cascade and air–blood barrier breakdown. Adapted with permission from Ref. 3. Copyright © 2017, Massachusetts Medical Society.
Figure 2Parameters that affecting delivery and therapeutic efficiency of nanomedicine in ARDS. Various drugs of distinct properties are applied for ARDS treatment. Both organic and inorganic/metallic carriers have been employed for drug delivery. Physicochemical properties can be manipulated for optimal drug delivery, including particle size, charge, shape, and hydrophilicity. Through engineering approaches such as modification or conjugation with specific molecules, peptides antibody, or membrane proteins on the surface, nanocarriers can accomplish passive, active, and physicochemical targeting. The therapeutic effect of drug delivery systems was mainly conducted in animals with few studies on human lung sections. Therapeutic regimens including administration time and route can also influence drug efficiency.
Figure 3Nanocarriers-mediated drug delivery for ARDS therapy. Current targeting strategies have been focused on handling overwhelming inflammations and restoring pulmonary functions by inhibiting inflammatory cells, capturing toxins and cytokines, decreasing inflammatory mediators, and recovering the air–blood barrier. Passive, active, and physicochemical targeting tactics were applied. (A) The passive targeting delivery has primarily relied on ELVIS (extravasation through leaky vasculature and subsequent inflammatory cell-mediated sequestration) effect. (B) Active targeting has been concentrated on inflamed endothelium, inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages, and impaired mitochondria. (i) targeting endothelium: nanocarriers with modification of particular molecules, antibodies, and peptides can be applied for targeting inflamed endothelium, where specific markers are highly expressed; biomimetic carriers derived from various functional cells (neutrophils, macrophages/monocytes, endothelial cells) can inherit good tropism to inflammatory endothelium; (ii) targeting neutrophils: particular nanocarriers can interfere with neutrophils to disturb their migrations to the lungs; some nanocarriers can be specifically internalized by activated neutrophils and hitchhiked to inflammatory site subsequently; nanocarriers can be employed for decreasing inflammatory mediators released by neutrophils; (iii) targeting macrophages: inhibiting pro-inflammatory M1 and promoting polarization to M2 phenotype; (iv) targeting mitochondria: scavenge ROS to protect mitochondria from damage; employing mitochondria-targeted materials for enhancing intracellular drug accumulation. (C) Physicochemical targeting: utilizing the aberrant inflammatory state such as excessive ROS, overproduced enzyme, and low pH to achieve site-specific drug delivery and stimuli-responsive release.
Passive targeted delivery of nanomedicine in ARDS.
| Platform | Drug | Size (nm) | Charge (mV) | Animal model | Therapeutic schedule | Note | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEI NPs | ∼60 | +30 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 1 or 24 h after injury | Increased alveolar fluid clearance to reduce lung edema | ||
| Cyclodextrin NPs | – | 238 | −31 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 1 h after injury | Internalized by inflammatory cells and inhibited their migration | |
| – | 109 | −16 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 1 h after injury | ROS-scavenging and anti-inflammatory properties; lung/liver: ∼0.4 | ||
| Luminol | 228 | – | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., not mentioned | MPO-responsive nanoplatform | ||
| PMPC-PMEMA polymer micelles | Prednisolone | 57.5 | – | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 8 h after injury | High-resolution for pulmonary inflammation diagnosis | |
| Liposomes | – | 100–200 | – | i.t., LPS, rat | i.v., 4 h after injury | Accumulated in the acutely inflamed sites selectively | |
| Clodronate | – | – | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 2 d before injury | Depleted circulating monocytes and reduced neutrophil infiltration | ||
| Nanovesicles | Rolipram | 154 | −34 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 1 h before injury | Increased lung uptake, accumulation and drug biocompatibility; lung/liver: ∼0.9 | |
| Cilomilast | 100.29 | +32.43 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 30 min before injury | Inhibition on neutrophilic inflammation; lung/liver: ∼0.7 | ||
| Oleic acid-based NPs | – | 105–225 | ∼−46 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 30 min before injury | Reduced pulmonary neutrophil recruitment and inflammatory mediator | |
| Interbilayer-crosslinked multilamellar vesicles | Sivelestat | 266 | −41.8 | i.p., LPS, mice | i.v., 1 h after injury | Inhibited the formation of NETs and decreased neutrophil elastase; lung/liver: ∼0.1 | |
| Nanoemulsions | Rolipram | 68–188 | ∼−47.7 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 30 min before injury | Internalized by neutrophils and reduced the distribution in the brain |
‒, not applicable; i.p., intraperitoneal; i.t., intratracheal; i.v., intravenous; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; NPs, nanoparticles; PEI, polyetherimide; ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Active targeted delivery systems in ARDS.
| Targeting | Platform | Modification | Drug | Size (nm) | Charge (mV) | Animal model | Therapeutic schedule | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endothelial | Liposomes | PECAM antibody | EUK-134 | 197.8 | −4.78 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 15 min before injury | Decreased lung edema and inflammation; lung/liver: ∼4 or ∼7 (with two different antibody conjugation) | |
| NLC | ICAM-1 antibody | Simvastatin | 354.7 | −32.1 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 6 h after injury | Reduced side effects, decreased the infiltration of inflammatory cells and cytokines | ||
| NLC | ICAM-1 antibody | Dexamethasone | 249.9 | −30.3 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 6 h after injury | Targeting ability and enhanced internalization in activated endothelial cells | ||
| NLC | ICAM-1 antibody | Simvastatin, protamine and angiopoietin 1 gene | 258–352 | 12.5–20.4 | LPS, mice | i.v., not mentioned | Up-regulated the expression of angiopoietin 1 protein, improved vascular permeability and reduced endothelial inflammation; lung/liver: ∼1.2 | ||
| Polymer micelles | ICAM-1 antibody | TPCA-1 | 100 | – | Nebulization, LPS, mice | i.v., 4 h after injury | pH-Responsive, enhanced pulmonary deposition | ||
| Lysozyme dextran nanogel | ICAM-1 antibody | Dexamethasone | 160 | – | i.v., LPS, mice | i.v., 15 min before injury | Reduced the off-target effect and blocked the expression of ICAM; lung/liver: ∼3 | ||
| PLGA NPs | Sparfloxacin and tacrolimus | 183.7 | −40 | i.t., | i.v., 4 h after injury | Targeted delivery to inflammation sites; lung/liver: ∼5 | |||
| PLGA NPs | YSA peptide | Lipophilic fluorescent dye | 219.4 | −32.76 | i.t., bleomycin, mice | i.v., 4 d after injury | Improved lung accumulation; lung/liver: ∼0.2 | ||
| Liposome-like nanovesicles | Macrophage membrane protein | – | 94 | −27 | i.p., LPS, mice | i.v., 30 min after injury | Interacted with macrophages as decoy and escaped from mononuclear phagocytic system | ||
| Monocyte membrane derived vesicles | – | Dexamethasone | ∼130 | ∼−40 | i.p., | i.v., 1 h before, 1, 3, and 6 h after injury | Inhibited the pro-inflammatory responses and reduced the adverse reactions | ||
| Macrophage membrane camouflaged nano-iron oxide clusters | – | – | – | −19.5 | i.v., LPS, mice | i.v., immediately after injury | Adsorbed and separated LPS, neutralized pro-inflammatory cytokines; lung/liver: ∼1.2 | ||
| Neutrophils-derived vesicles | – | Piceatannol | ∼180 | ∼−18 | i.p., LPS, mice | i.v., 2 h after injury | Reduced neutrophil infiltration and reversed pulmonary edema | ||
| Platelet-derived EVs | – | TPCA-1 | 100–150 | −30 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 4 h after injury | Inhibition on pulmonary inflammatory cells and blocked cytokine storms; lung/liver: ∼2.6 | ||
| MPMVECs derived EVs | – | Syndecan-1 | 100 | – | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 2 and 12 h after injury | Improved the function of pulmonary microvascular barrier | ||
| PEG-PLGA microspheres | Sialic acid | Curcumin | 852 | −24.2 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 4 h after injury | Dual-targeting for inflamed lungs and mitochondria | ||
| Neutrophils | BSA NPs | – | Piceatannol | 100 | – | i.p., LPS, mice | i.v., 2 h after injury | Denatured albumin nanoparticles for targeting activated neutrophils | |
| BSA NPs | – | TPCA-1 | ∼130 | ∼−35 | Nebulization, LPS, mice | i.v., 4 or 12 h after injury | Transported across the vascular barrier and increased accumulation in lung tissues | ||
| BSA NPs | Esbp peptide | Dexamethasone | 251.7 | −20.03 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.v., 24 h after injury | Improved the biocompatibility and avoided potential side effects; lung/liver: ∼0.25 | ||
| MNSs | PDA | DNase-I | 170 | −10.9 | CLP, mice | i.v., 12 or 24 h after injury | Alleviated NETosis dysregulation and prolonged DNase-I circulation | ||
| PLGA NPs | PDA | DNase-I | 217 ± 1.63 | −12.0 | CLP, mice | i.v., 12 or 24 h after injury | Decreased NETosis | ||
| Macrophages | PLGA NPs | Siglec-E | – | – | +0.3 | i.t., LPS, mice | i.p., 2 h after injury | Regulated neutrophil infiltration and inhibited TLR-mediated inflammation | |
| Au NPs | – | – | 24 | −32 | i.p., LPS, mice | i.p., 12 h after injury daily up to the seventh day | Reduced peritoneal leukocyte and regulated activity of oxidants | ||
| Alveolar epithelial | Liposomes | SP-A antibody | Dexamethasone | 136 | – | i.t., bleomycin, rat | i.v., once daily for 1–2 weeks | Increased the concentration of dexamethasone and reduced adverse effects; lung/liver: ∼2.5 | |
| Liposomes | SP-A nanobody | Methylprednisolone | 106 | – | i.t., bleomycin, rat | i.v., once daily for 2 weeks | Reduced the adverse effect and decreased the inflammatory cytokines; lung/liver: ∼3.9 | ||
| Mitochondria | Porous Se@SiO2 nanospheres | – | – | ∼55 | – | Intragastric administration, paraquat, rat | i.p., every 24 h, for 3 days | Inhibition of ROS and reduction of NF- | |
| Cerium oxide NPs | – | – | 10–30 | – | Irradiation, rat | i.p., twice a week for 2 weeks | Served as radioprotector | ||
| Cerium oxide NPs | – | – | 38.11 | +19.1 | Irradiation, mice | i.p., twice weekly for 4 weeks | Improved pulmonary function |
‒, not applicable; BSA, bovine serum albumin; CLP, cecal ligation and perforation; Esbp, E-selectin-binding peptide; EVs, extracellular vesicles; i.p., intraperitoneal; i.t., intratracheal; i.v., intravenous; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule-1; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MNSs, melanin-like nanospheres; MPMVECs, mouse pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells; NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; NF-κB, transcription factor nuclear factor-κB; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers; NPs, nanoparticles; OMVs, outer membrane vesicles; PDA, polydopamine; PECAM, platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule; PECAM, platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); ROS, reactive oxygen species; Siglec-E, sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin-E; SP, surfactant protein; TLR, Toll-like receptor; YSA, YSAYPDSVPMMS.
Figure 4Targeting neutrophils by drug-loaded BSA nanoparticles. (A) The schematic of neutrophils-mediated delivery of BSA nanoparticles to reach the inflammatory site. (B) TPCA-1 concentration in plasma and BALF after TPCA-1 or TPCA-1 BSA nanoparticles injection. (C) Cell count of leukocytes and neutrophils in BALF. (D) IL-6 and (E) TNF-α concentration in BALF after drug administration (vehicle of TPCA-1 solution, 5% glucose, TPCA-1 solution, or TPCA-1 BSA nanoparticles). All data represent mean ± SD (n = 3–4, per group). Statistics were performed by a two-sample Student's t test (∗∗P < 0.01). Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 62. Copyright © 2015, American Chemical Society.
Figure 5Long-acting DNase-I nanoparticles for COVID-19 treatment. (A) Fabrication of long-acting DNase-I nanoparticle. (B) Quantitative analysis of plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) level and DNase-I activity from patient with SARS-CoV-2 sepsis after free DNase-I or long-acting DNase-I treatment (n = 10). (C) NET ratio, MPO, and NE concentration after free drug or long-acting nanoparticles therapy in SARS-CoV-2 Sepsis patient’ PBMCs. (D) NF-κB p65 binding activity and plasma cytokine levels with free DNase-I or long-acting DNase-I treatment in PBMCs from SARS-CoV-2 patients. The experiment was repeated at least three times. Statistics were analyzed using a two-tailed unpaired t-test. Data are displayed as mean ± SEM. ∗∗P < 0.01, ∗∗∗P < 0.001. Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 71. Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Inc.
Figure 6MPO and ROS dual-responsive nanoparticles for real-time imaging of inflammatory site. (A) The fabrication of luminescent materials with dual-responsive properties. (B) In vivo luminescence images of luminol or Lu-bCD nanoparticles before and after i.v. injection in ARDS mice. (C) Ex vivo fluorescence imaging of lung tissue after Lu-bCD nanoparticles treatment. (D) The luminescent intensities, MPO, and H2O2 levels, and neutrophil amounts in the lungs at different time points after LPS challenge. (E) Linear correlation analysis between luminescent intensity and neutrophil count, H2O2, and MPO level. Error bars, mean ± SD (n = 4, B and C; n = 6, D and E). Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 136. Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Inc.
Figure 7RBC-hitchhiking for lung targeted delivery. (A) Scheme of RBC-hitchhiking: nanocarriers (NCs) were attached to RBCs, followed by the injection via an intravascular catheter, then the NCs transferred to the first downstream capillary. (B) Representative scanning electron micrographs of nanoparticles or nanogels absorbed on RBC (scale bars, 1 μm). (C) i.v. injection of RBC-hitchhiking NCs enhanced lung delivery. Mice were injected with nanogels that were uncoated (bare) or different antibodies (anti-PECAM, anti-ICAM, or IgG) coated, with or without RBC-hitchhiking. Data are plotted as % of the injected dose (%ID) per organ. Each data point represents mean ± SEM (n = 3). ∗P < 0.05, non-paired, two-tailed t-test. Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 195. Copyright © 2018, Nature Publishing Group.
Figure 8Biomimetic drug delivery systems for virus and cytokine neutralization. (A) The scheme of cellular nanosponges preventing viruses from entering host cells through surface antigen. (B) Western blotting analysis of cell lysate, cell membrane, and cellular nanosponges obtained from epithelial cells and macrophages. Data are presented as mean ± SD. n = 3. (C) The illustration of nanodecoy preparation. The nanodecoy was derived from cell membrane vesicles of human THP-1 cells and genetically engineered 293T/ACE2. Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 204. Copyright © 2020, American Chemical Society and Ref. 209. Copyright © 2020, the Author(s).
Figure 9Platelet-derived extracellular vesicles for targeting inflammatory lungs. (A) Schematic of platelet-derived EVs with TPCA-1 loaded for pneumonia therapy. The inflammatory cytokine storm was remarkably reduced, as indicated by TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-1β. (B) Ex vivo imaging and corresponding fluorescence level of main organs after i.v. injection of DiD-labeled PEVs. Data are presented as mean ± SEM (n = 3–5). Statistical significance is calculated by one-way ANOVA using Tukey's post-test. ∗∗P < 0.01; ∗∗∗P < 0.005. Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 63. Copyright ©2020, Elsevier Inc.
Figure 10Neutrophil elastase-sensitive nanoparticles-in-microgels for particle allosteric strategy. (A) The preparation of neutrophil elastase-sensitive nanoparticles-in-microgels (N-in-M) microgels and illustration of the mechanism of NE-responsive drug release. (B) MPO activity detected by fluorescence image of lung tissue. (C) Neutrophil numbers and (D) neutrophil percentage in BALF after treatment. Statistical tests: Shapiro-Wilk followed by Kruskal-Wallis (C) and 1-way ANOVA (D), with ∗P < 0.05, ∗∗P < 0.01, and ∗∗∗P < 0.001 between groups denoted. n = 5 each group. Reprinted with the permission from Ref. 156. Copyright © 2019, The American Society for Clinical Investigation.