4.8 Article

Ultrasound-Propelled Janus Rod-Shaped Micromotors for Site-Specific Sonodynamic Thrombolysis

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 49, Pages 58411-58421

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c19288

Keywords

Janus microrod; rod-shaped micromotor; ultrasonication-propelled motion; sonodynamic thrombolysis; thrombus targeting Fe

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071394, 31771034]

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The study achieves precise and prompt thrombolysis through selective targeting to clots and efficient penetration into dense networks of thrombi using Janus rod (JR)-shaped micromotors.
Antithrombosis therapy is confronted with short halflives of thrombolytic agents, limited therapeutic effects, and bleeding complications. Drug delivery systems of thrombolytic agents face challenges in effective penetration into thrombi, which are characterized by well-organized fibrin filled with abundant activated platelets. Herein, Janus rod (JR)-shaped micromotors are constructed by side-by-side electrospinning and cryosection, possessing advantages in controlling the Janus structure and aspect ratio of microrods. Silicon phthalocyanine (Pc) and CaO2 nanoparticles (NPs) are loaded into the separate sides of JRs, and Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides are grafted on the surface to obtain Pc/Ca@r-JRs for the sonodynamic therapy (SDT) of thrombosis without using any thrombolytic agents. Decomposition of CaO2 NPs ejects O-2 bubbles from one side of JRs, and ultrasonication of O-2 bubbles produces the cavitation effect, both generating mechanical force to drive the thrombus penetration. The integration of ultrasonication-propelled motion and RGD mediation effectively increases the targeting capabilities of r-JRs to activated platelets. In addition to mechanical thrombolysis, ultrasonication of the released Pc produces O-1(2) to destruct fibrin networks of clots. In vitro thrombolysis of whole blood clots shows that ultrasonication of Pc/Ca@r-JRs has a significantly higher thrombolysis rate (73.6%) than those without propelled motion or RGD-mediated clot targeting. In a lower limb thrombosis model, intravenous administration of Pc/Ca@r-JRs indicates 3.4-fold higher accumulations at the clot site than those of JRs, and ultrasonication-propelled motion further increases thrombus retention 2.1 times. Treatment with Pc/Ca@r-JRs and ultrasonication fully removes thrombi and significantly prolongs tail bleeding time. Thus, this study has achieved precise and prompt thrombolysis through selective targeting to clots, efficient penetration into dense networks of thrombi, and SDT-executed thrombolysis.

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