Litcius/Paper detail

Macrophage membrane camouflaged reactive oxygen species responsive nanomedicine for efficiently inhibiting the vascular intimal hyperplasia

Boyan Liu, Wenhua Yan, Li Luo, Shuai Wu, Yi Wang, Yuan Zhong, Dan Tang, Ali Maruf, Meng Yan, Kun Zhang, Xian Qin, Kai Qu, Wei Wu, Guixue Wang

2021Journal of Nanobiotechnology48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Intimal hyperplasia caused by vascular injury is an important pathological process of many vascular diseases, especially occlusive vascular disease. In recent years, Nano-drug delivery system has attracted a wide attention as a novel treatment strategy, but there are still some challenges such as high clearance rate and insufficient targeting. RESULTS: In this study, we report a biomimetic ROS-responsive MM@PCM/RAP nanoparticle coated with macrophage membrane. The macrophage membrane with the innate "homing" capacity can superiorly regulate the recruitment of MM@PCM/RAP to inflammatory lesion to enhance target efficacy, and can also disguise MM@PCM/RAP nanoparticle as the autologous cell to avoid clearance by the immune system. In addition, MM@PCM/RAP can effectively improve the solubility of rapamycin and respond to the high concentration level of ROS accumulated in pathological lesion for controlling local cargo release, thereby increasing drug availability and reducing toxic side effects. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings validate that the rational design, biomimetic nanoparticles MM@PCM/RAP, can effectively inhibit the pathological process of intimal injury with excellent biocompatibility.

Topics & Concepts

BiocompatibilityReactive oxygen speciesMacrophageIntimal hyperplasiaNanomedicineDrug deliveryLesionHoming (biology)ChemistryPharmacologyCell biologyMedicinePathologyNanotechnologyNanoparticleMaterials scienceIn vitroBiologyInternal medicineBiochemistryEcologyOrganic chemistrySmooth muscleNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsAdvanced Nanomaterials in CatalysisImmune cells in cancer