4.8 Article

Gallium Nanodroplets are Anti-Inflammatory without Interfering with Iron Homeostasis

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 8891-8903

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c10981

Keywords

liquid metal; gallium nanodroplet; anti-inflammatory; iron homeostasis; nitric oxide

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) Laureate Fellowship grant [FL180100053]

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This study reveals the mechanisms of gallium as an anti-inflammatory by delivering gallium nanodroplets into macrophages. The gallium nanodroplets selectively inhibit nitric oxide production without affecting the accumulation of pro-inflammatory mediators. This study provides new insights for the use of gallium in anti-inflammatory and future biomedical applications.
Gallium (Ga) compounds, as the source of Ga ions (Ga3+), have been historically used as anti-inflammatories. Currently, the widely accepted mechanisms of the anti-inflammatory effects for Ga3+ are rationalized on the basis of their similarities to ferric ions (Fe3+), which permits Ga3+ to bind with Fe-binding proteins and subsequently disturbs the Fe homeostasis in the immune cells. Here in contrast to the classic views, our study presents the mechanisms of Ga as anti-inflammatory by delivering Ga nanodroplets (GNDs) into lipopolysaccharide-induced macrophages and exploring the processes. The GNDs show a selective inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) production without affecting the accumulation of pro-inflammatory mediators. This is explained by GNDs disrupting the synthesis of inducible NO synthase in the activated macrophages by upregulating the levels of eIF2 alpha phosphorylation, without interfering with the Fe homeostasis. The Fe3+ transferrin receptor-independent endocytosis of GNDs by the cells prompts a fundamentally different mechanism as anti-inflammatories in comparison to that imparted by Ga3+. This study reveals the fundamental molecular basis of GND-macrophage interactions, which may provide additional avenues for the use of Ga for anti-inflammatory and future biomedical and pharmaceutical applications.

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