4.8 Article

Increasing stiffness promotes pulmonary retention of ligand-directed dexamethasone-loaded nanoparticle for enhanced acute lung inflammation therapy

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages 539-547

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.06.016

Keywords

Pulmonary drug delivery; Mucus barrier; Epithelial barrier; Stiffness; Ligand modification; Acute lung inflammation

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Surface ligand modification and stiffness adjustment significantly enhance bronchial mucosal absorption and pulmonary retention of inhaled drugs. In an acute lung inflammation rat model, NPs with FcBP and high stiffness display superior therapeutic effects. In vitro data demonstrates that FcBP promotes bronchial mucosal absorption of NPs with high stiffness more effectively than NPs with low stiffness. The higher stiffness also enhances endocytosis and exocytosis to improve drug absorption and retention.
Inhaled nanoparticles (NPs) need to penetrate the bronchial mucosa to deliver drug payloads deeply in the lung for amplified local therapy. However, the bronchial mucociliary barrier eliminates NPs rapidly, which considerably limits their mucosal penetration. In this study, we find that surface ligand modification and stiffness adjustment of NPs contribute to the significantly enhanced bronchial mucosal absorption and pulmonary retention of inhaled drugs. We utilize neonatal Fc receptor ligand (FcBP) to modify the rationally designed low stiffness NPs (Soft-NP) and high stiffness NPs (Stiff-NP) to target bronchial mucosa. In an acute lung inflammation rat model, after intranasal administration with dexamethasone-loaded NPs, Stiff-NP endowed with FcBP displays superior therapeutic effects. The in vitro data demonstrate that the promotion effect of FcBP to bronchial mucosal absorption of Stiff-NP dominates over Soft-NP. This could be attributed to the higher affinity between ligand-receptor when incorporating FcBP on the Stiff-NP surface. Meanwhile, high stiffness modulates more actin filaments aggregation to mediate endocytosis, along with strengthened Ca2+ signal to enhance exocytosis. Conclusively, we highlight that FcBP-modified NPs with higher stiffness would be a potential pulmonary drug delivery system.

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