4.8 Article

miR-145 micelles mitigate atherosclerosis by modulating vascular smooth muscle cell phenotype

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 273, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.120810

Keywords

Peptide; Micelle; Nanomedicine; microRNA; Atherosclerosis; Smooth muscle cell

Funding

  1. University of Southern California
  2. American Heart Association [19PRE34380998]
  3. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [R00HL124279]
  4. New Innovator Award (NIH) [DP2-DK121328]
  5. Eli and Edythe Broad Innovation Award
  6. L.K. Whittier Foundation Non-Cancer Translational Research Award
  7. WISE Gabilan Assistant Professorship

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The delivery of miR-145 micelles to VSMCs shows promise in mitigating atherosclerosis progression by altering cell phenotypes and reducing plaque growth. In mouse experiments, miR-145 micelles significantly inhibited the advancement of atherosclerosis.
In atherosclerosis, resident vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in the blood vessels become highly plastic and undergo phenotypic switching from the quiescent, contractile phenotype to the migratory and proliferative, synthetic phenotype. Additionally, recent VSMC lineage-tracing mouse models of atherosclerosis have found that VSMCs transdifferentiate into macrophage-like and osteochondrogenic cells and make up to 70% of cells found in atherosclerotic plaques. Given VSMC phenotypic switching is regulated by microRNA-145 (miR-145), we hypothesized that nanoparticle-mediated delivery of miR-145 to VSMCs has the potential to mitigate atherosclerosis development by inhibiting plaque-propagating cell types derived from VSMCs. To test our hypothesis, we synthesized miR-145 micelles targeting the C-C chemokine receptor-2 (CCR2), which is highly expressed on synthetic VSMCs. When miR-145 micelles were incubated with human aortic VSMCs in vitro, >90% miR-145 micelles escaped the lysosomal pathway in 4 hours and released the miR cargo under cytosolic levels of glutathione, an endogenous reducing agent. As such, miR-145 micelles rescued atheroprotective contractile markers, myocardin, alpha-SMA, and calponin, in synthetic VSMCs in vitro. In early-stage atherosclerotic ApoE-/- mice, one dose of miR-145 micelles prevented lesion growth by 49% and sustained an increased level of miR-145 expression after 2 weeks post-treatment. Additionally, miR-145 micelles inhibited 35% and 43% plaque growth compared to free miR-145 and PBS, respectively, in mid-stage atherosclerotic ApoE-/- mice. Collectively, we present a novel therapeutic strategy and cell target for atherosclerosis, and present miR-145 micelles as a viable nanotherapeutic that can intervene atherosclerosis progression at both early and later stages of disease.

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