4.4 Article

Macrophage-Biomimetic Nanoparticles Ameliorate Ulcerative Colitis through Reducing Inflammatory Factors Expression

Journal

JOURNAL OF INNATE IMMUNITY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000519363

Keywords

Ulcerative colitis; Biomimetic nanoparticles; Drug delivery system

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The study developed a safe and effective nano-delivery system targeting S100A9, which significantly improved the therapeutic efficacy in an ulcerative colitis mouse model by reducing S100a9 and other cytokines to achieve immunomodulatory and suppressive effects.
Background and Aims: Inflammatory mediator S100A9 is dramatically elevated in ulcerative colitis and correlates with disease severity. S100A9 is a potential molecule to target for the treatment of colitis, but to date, there is no effective targeting method. The aim of this study was to develop a safe and effective nano-delivery system targeting S100A9 and to evaluate its therapeutic efficacy in ulcerative colitis mouse model. Methods: We designed an oral nano-delivery system using poly (lactic acid-glycolic acid) (PLGA)-loaded S100A9 inhibitor tasquinimod to synthesize PLGA-TAS nanoparticles. TLR4-overexpressing macrophage membranes (MMs) were used to wrap the nanoparticles to make MM-PLGA-TAS, which allowed the nanoparticles to acquire the ability to specifically enrich the colitis region. Results: MM-PLGA-TAS was endocytosed by inflammatory phenotype RAW264.7 cells in vitro and can efficiently enrich in inflamed mouse colitis tissue in vivo. A chemically induced ulcerative colitis mouse model was used to evaluate the therapeutic effect of oral MM-PLGA-TAS. MM-PLGA-TAS significantly alleviated the symptoms of ulcerative colitis, and mechanically, MM-PLGA-TAS achieved immunomodulatory and suppressive effects by reducing S100a9 and other cytokines in the colitis region. Conclusion: We describe a convenient, orally targeted colitis drug delivery system that cures the disease in ulcerative colitis mice. This system substantially increases drug accumulation in inflamed colonic tissue, reduces the risk of systemic exposure, and is a promising therapeutic approach against ulcerative colitis.

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