4.8 Article

ROS responsive nanoparticles loaded with lipid-specific AIEgen for atherosclerosis-targeted diagnosis and bifunctional therapy

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 288, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121734

Keywords

Nanoparticle; ROS responsive; Lipid removal; Lipid specific bioimaging; Anti -atherosclerosis; Active targeting

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. National 111 Project of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities
  3. Scientific Fund of Sichuan Province
  4. Sichuan Science and Technology Major Project
  5. State Key Laboratory of Polymer Materials Engineering
  6. [32171364]
  7. [B16033]
  8. [21YYJC0697]
  9. [2018SZDZX0011]
  10. [2018SZDZX0012]
  11. [sklpme2018-3-05]

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Atherosclerosis, a common cardiovascular disease, can benefit from drug delivery systems for accurate diagnosis and treatment, but improvements are needed to overcome current limitations like stability and targeting issues.
Atherosclerosis, which is triggered by endothelial damage, progressive local inflammation and excessive lipid accumulation, is one of the most common cardiovascular diseases in recent years. Drug delivery systems have shown great potential for the accurate diagnosis and effective treatment of early atherosclerosis, but are accompanied by disadvantages such as poor stability, lack of active targeting and non-specific recognition ca-pabilities, which still need to be further developed. In our work, a multifunctional nanoparticle (LFP/PCDPD) with reactive oxygen species (ROS) responsive drug release, lipid removal, and lipid-specific AIE fluorescence imaging was constructed. Cyclodextrin structure with lipid removal function and PMEMA blocks with ROS-response-mediated hydrophobic to hydrophilic conversion were simultaneously introduced into the structure of LFP/PCDPD to load the anti-inflammatory drug prednisolone (Pred) and lipid-specific AIEgen (LFP). The active targeting function of LFP/PCDPD was conferred by the high affinity of dextran to the vascular adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) and CD44 receptor on the surface of broken endothelial cells. After intravenous injection into ApoE-/-mice, LFP/PCDPD actively enriched in the microenvironment of local ROS overexpression and rich lipids in atherosclerosis. Pred and LFP were released while lipids were removed, thus enabling proactive tar-geting of atherosclerosis and efficient two-pronged treatment.

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