| Literature DB >> 35851383 |
Michelle A Cruz1, Dillon Bohinc2, Elizabeth A Andraska3, Jurgis Alvikas4, Shruti Raghunathan5, Nicole A Masters6, Nadine D van Kleef7, Kara L Bane2, Kathryn Hart5, Kathryn Medrow5, Michael Sun5, Haitao Liu8, Shannon Haldeman4, Ankush Banerjee5, Emma M Lessieur9, Kara Hageman5, Agharnan Gandhi2, Maria de la Fuente10, Marvin T Nieman10, Timothy S Kern9,11, Coen Maas7, Steven de Maat7, Keith B Neeves12, Matthew D Neal4, Anirban Sen Gupta13,14,15,16, Evi X Stavrou17,18,19.
Abstract
Targeted drug delivery to disease-associated activated neutrophils can provide novel therapeutic opportunities while avoiding systemic effects on immune functions. We created a nanomedicine platform that uniquely utilizes an α1-antitrypsin-derived peptide to confer binding specificity to neutrophil elastase on activated neutrophils. Surface decoration with this peptide enabled specific anchorage of nanoparticles to activated neutrophils and platelet-neutrophil aggregates, in vitro and in vivo. Nanoparticle delivery of a model drug, hydroxychloroquine, demonstrated significant reduction of neutrophil activities in vitro and a therapeutic effect on murine venous thrombosis in vivo. This innovative approach of cell-specific and activation-state-specific targeting can be applied to several neutrophil-driven pathologies.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35851383 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-022-01161-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 40.523