4.8 Article

Pathogen infection-responsive nanoplatform targeting macrophage endoplasmic reticulum for treating life-threatening systemic infection

Journal

NANO RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 6243-6255

Publisher

TSINGHUA UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s12274-022-4211-z

Keywords

mesoporous silica nanoparticle; antimicrobial peptide; systemic infection; endoplasmic reticulum

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [3217010793, 31870139]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin [19JCZDJC33800]
  3. Tianjin Synthetic Biotechnology Innovation Capacity Improvement Project [TSBICIP-KJGG-006]

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In this study, a pathogen infection-responsive and macrophage endoplasmic reticulum-targeting nanoplatform was developed to alleviate systemic infections. The nanoplatform efficiently loaded and released an antimicrobial peptide, inhibited pathogen growth and macrophage stress, and protected against kidney dysfunction and inflammation in a systemic infection model.
Systemic infections caused by life-threatening pathogens represent one of the main factors leading to clinical death. In this study, we developed a pathogen infection-responsive and macrophage endoplasmic reticulum-targeting nanoplatform to alleviate systemic infections. The nanoplatform is composed of large-pore mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) grafted by an endoplasmic reticulum-targeting peptide, and a pathogen infection-responsive cap containing the reactive oxygen species-cleavable boronobenzyl acid linker and bovine serum albumin. The capped MSNs exhibited the capacity to high-efficiently load the antimicrobial peptide melittin, and to rapidly release the cargo triggered by H2O2 or the pathogen-macrophage interaction system, but had no obvious toxicity to macrophages. During the interaction with pathogenic Candida albicans cells and macrophages, the melittin-loading nanoplatform MSNE+MEL+TPB strongly inhibited pathogen growth, survived macrophages, and suppressed endoplasmic reticulum stress together with pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion. In a systemic infection model, the nanoplatform efficiently prevented kidney dysfunction, alleviated inflammatory symptoms, and protected the mice from death. This study developed a macrophage organelle-targeting nanoplatform for treatment of life-threatening systemic infections.

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