Litcius/Paper detail

Efficient transfected liposomes co-loaded with pNrf2 and pirfenidone improves safe delivery for enhanced pulmonary fibrosis reversion

Xin Chang, Chang Liu, Yumo Han, Qiuling Li, Bin Guo, Hu‐Lin Jiang

2023Molecular Therapy — Nucleic Acids13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is an interstitial lung disease with complex pathological mechanism, and there is currently a lack of therapeutics that can heal it completely. Using gene therapy with drugs provides promising therapeutic strategies for synergistically reversing PF. However, improving the intracellular accumulation and transfection efficiency of therapeutic nucleic acids is still a critical issue that urgently needs to be addressed. Herein, we developed lipid nanoparticles (PEDPs) with high transfection efficiency coloaded with pDNA of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (pNrf2) and pirfenidone (PFD) for PF therapy. PEDPs can penetrate biological barriers, accumulate at the target, and exert therapeutic effects, eventually alleviating the oxidative stress imbalance in type II alveolar epithelial cells (AECs II) and inhibiting myofibroblast overactivation through the synergistic effects of Nrf2 combined with PFD, thus reversing PF. In addition, we systematically engineered various liposomes (LNPs), demonstrated that reducing the polyethylene glycol (PEG) proportion could significantly improve the uptake and transfection efficiency of the LNPs, and proposed a possible mechanism for this influence. This study clearly reveals that controlling the composition ratio of PEG in PEDPs can efficiently deliver therapeutics into AECs II, improve pNrf2 transfection, and synergize with PFD in a prospective strategy to reverse PF.

Topics & Concepts

TransfectionPirfenidoneGenetic enhancementNucleic acidPulmonary fibrosisCancer researchLiposomePharmacologyIntracellularMedicineChemistryFibrosisIdiopathic pulmonary fibrosisLungPathologyBiochemistryGeneInternal medicineInterstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary FibrosisMedical Imaging and Pathology StudiesPolyomavirus and related diseases