| Literature DB >> 35066925 |
Wenli Feng1, Guofeng Li1, Xiaoxu Kang1, Ruibai Wang2, Fang Liu3, Dongdong Zhao1, Haofei Li1, Fanqiang Bu1, Yingjie Yu1, T Fintan Moriarty4, Qun Ren5, Xing Wang1.
Abstract
Intracellular bacteria in latent or dormant states tolerate high-dose antibiotics. Fighting against these opportunistic bacteria has been a long-standing challenge. Herein, the design of a cascade-targeting drug delivery system (DDS) that can sequentially target macrophages and intracellular bacteria, exhibiting on-site drug delivery, is reported. The DDS is fabricated by encapsulating rifampicin (Rif) into mannose-decorated poly(α-N-acryloyl-phenylalanine)-block-poly(β-N-acryloyl-d-aminoalanine) nanoparticles, denoted as Rif@FAM NPs. The mannose units on Rif@FAM NPs guide the initial macrophage-specific uptake and intracellular accumulation. After the uptake, the detachment of mannose in acidic phagolysosome via Schiff base cleavage exposes the d-aminoalanine moieties, which subsequently steer the NPs to escape from lysosomes and target intracellular bacteria through peptidoglycan-specific binding, as evidenced by the in situ/ex situ co-localization using confocal, flow cytometry, and transmission electron microscopy. Through the on-site Rif delivery, Rif@FAM NPs show superior in vitro and in vivo elimination efficiency than the control groups of free Rif or the DDSs lacking the macrophages- or bacteria-targeting moieties. Furthermore, Rif@FAM NPs remodel the innate immune response of the infected macrophages by upregulating M1/M2 polarization, resulting in a reinforced antibacterial capacity. Therefore, this biocompatible DDS enabling macrophages and bacteria targeting in a cascade manner provides a new outlook for the therapy of intracellular pathogen infection.Entities:
Keywords: cascade-targeting drug delivery systems; intracellular bacteria targeting; macrophage polarization; on-site antibiotic delivery; poly(N-acryloyl amino acid)
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35066925 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202109789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849