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Multimodal Imaging-Assisted Intravascular Theranostic Photoactivation on Atherosclerotic Plaque

Jin Hyuk Kim, Jin Hyuk Kim, Joon Woo Song, Yeon Hoon Kim, Hyun Jung Kim, Ryeong Hyun Kim, Ye Hee Park, Hyeong Soo Nam, Dong Oh Kang, Hongki Yoo, Kyeongsoon Park, Jin Won Kim, Jin Won Kim

2024Circulation Research12 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease causing a fatal plaque rupture, and its key aspect is a failure to resolve inflammation. We hypothesize that macrophage-targeted near-infrared fluorescence emitting photoactivation could simultaneously assess macrophage/lipid-rich plaques in vivo and facilitate inflammation resolution. METHODS: We fabricated a Dectin-1-targeted photoactivatable theranostic agent through the chemical conjugation of the near-infrared fluorescence-emitting photosensitizer chlorin e6 and the Dectin-1 ligand laminarin (laminarin-chlorin e6 [LAM-Ce6]). Intravascular photoactivation by a customized fiber-based diffuser after administration of LAM-Ce6 effectively reduced inflammation in the targeted plaques of atherosclerotic rabbits in vivo as serially assessed by dual-modal optical coherence tomography-near-infrared fluorescence structural-molecular catheter imaging after 4 weeks. RESULTS: The number of apoptotic macrophages peaked at 1 day after laser irradiation and then resolved until 4 weeks. Autophagy was strongly augmented 1 hour after the light therapy, with the formation of autophagolysosomes. LAM-Ce6 photoactivation increased the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP (deoxyuridine triphosphate) nick end labeling/RAM11 (rabbit monocyte/macrophage antibody)- and MerTK (c-Mer tyrosine kinase)-positive cells in the plaques, suggesting enhanced efferocytosis. In line with inflammation resolution, photoactivation reduced the plaque burden through fibrotic replacement via the TGF (transforming growth factor)-β/CTGF (connective tissue growth factor) pathway. CONCLUSIONS: Optical coherence tomography-near-infrared fluorescence imaging-guided macrophage Dectin-1-targetable photoactivation could induce the transition of macrophage/lipid-rich plaques into collagen-rich lesions through autophagy-mediated inflammation resolution and TGF-β-dependent fibrotic replacement. This novel strategy offers a new opportunity for the catheter-based theranostic strategy.

Topics & Concepts

InflammationEfferocytosisMERTKMacrophageIn vivoPhotodynamic therapyPathologyCancer researchChemistryCell biologyMedicineImmunologyBiologyReceptor tyrosine kinaseReceptorBiochemistryIn vitroBiotechnologyOrganic chemistryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsOptical Coherence Tomography ApplicationsAngiogenesis and VEGF in Cancer
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