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A Step-by-Step Approach to Improve Clinical Translation of Liposome-Based Nanomaterials, a Focus on Innate Immune and Inflammatory Responses

Giacomo Della Camera, Dorelia Lipsa, Dóra Méhn, Paola Italiani, Diana Boraschi, Sabrina Gioria

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study aims to provide guidelines to design and perform a robust and reliable physical-chemical characterization of liposome-based nanomaterials, and to support method development with a specific focus on their inflammation-inducing potential. Out of eight differently functionalized liposomes selected as "case-studies", three passed the physical-chemical characterization ( in terms of size-distribution, homogeneity and stability) and the screening for bacterial contamination (sterility and apyrogenicity). Although all three were non-cytotoxic when tested in vitro, they showed a different capacity to activate human blood cells. HSPC/CHOL-coated liposomes elicited the production of several inflammation-related cytokines, while DPPC/CHOL- or DSPC/CHOL-functionalized liposomes did not. This work underlines the need for accurate characterization at multiple levels and the use of reliable in vitro methods, in order to obtain a realistic assessment of liposome-induced human inflammatory response, as a fundamental requirement of nanosafety regulations.

Topics & Concepts

Innate immune systemTranslation (biology)Focus (optics)Immune systemInflammationLiposomeMedicineImmunologyNanotechnologyComputer scienceComputational biologyBiologyMaterials sciencePhysicsBiochemistryMessenger RNAGeneOpticsAntimicrobial Peptides and ActivitiesRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryExtracellular vesicles in disease
A Step-by-Step Approach to Improve Clinical Translation of Liposome-Based Nanomaterials, a Focus on Innate Immune and Inflammatory Responses | Litcius