| Literature DB >> 35235710 |
Chang Liu1,2,3, Pengpeng Yan1, Xiaoyu Xu2,3,4, Wenhui Zhou2,3, Dhayakumar Rajan Prakash2, Shuqi Wang5, Junnian Zhou6,7, Rending Wang1, Hongfeng Huang1, Jianghua Chen1, Hongbo Zhang2,3,8, Jia Shen1.
Abstract
Kidney transplantation is the most effective therapy for patients with end-stage renal disease. However, antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) threatens long-term survival of renal grafts. Although ABMR can be controlled by donor-specific antibody clearance and B- or (and) plasma-cells inhibition, the treatment often causes severe side effects in patients. Therefore, there is need to explore site-specific scavengers. In this study, a nanovehicle carrying an anti-inflammatory drug is developed with complement component 4d targeting, a specific biomarker expressed on allograft endothelium under ABMR. Moreover, the nanovehicle is endowed with photothermal properties to control drug release. Analysis through systematic in vitro and in vivo toxicity, non-invasive targeted imaging, and in situ remote controlled drug release show the nanovehicle specifically targets allograft kidney endothelium, releases an anti-inflammatory drug, methylprednisolone, locally upon laser irradiation, and promotes recovery of injured endothelium, without affecting systemic inflammation or innate immune responses. This strategy has the potential for future clinical application in ABMR treatment.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammation; antibody-mediated rejection; controlled drug release; kidney transplantation; targeting delivery
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35235710 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202106746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 15.153