4.8 Article

Live dynamic imaging of caveolae pumping targeted antibody rapidly and specifically across endothelium in the lung

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NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
卷 25, 期 3, 页码 327-337

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nbt1292

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资金

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R24 CA095893, R01 CA119378, R24CA95893, R01CA104898, P01 CA104898, R01 CA119378-02] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL058216, R01 HL052766, R01 HL52766, R01 HL074063, R01 HL58216] Funding Source: Medline

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How effectively and quickly endothelial caveolae can transcytose in vivo is unknown, yet critical for understanding their function and potential clinical utility. Here we use quantitative proteomics to identify aminopeptidase P (APP) concentrated in caveolae of lung endothelium. Electron microscopy confirms this and shows that APP antibody targets nanoparticles to caveolae. Dynamic intravital fluorescence microscopy reveals that targeted caveolae operate effectively as pumps, moving antibody within seconds from blood across endothelium into lung tissue, even against a concentration gradient. This active transcytosis requires normal caveolin-1 expression. Whole body gamma-scintigraphic imaging shows rapid, specific delivery into lung well beyond that achieved by standard vascular targeting. This caveolar trafficking in vivo may underscore a key physiological mechanism for selective transvascular exchange and may provide an enhanced delivery system for imaging agents, drugs, gene-therapy vectors and nanomedicines. 'In vivo proteomic imaging' as described here integrates organellar proteomics with multiple imaging techniques to identify an accessible target space that includes the transvascular pumping space of the caveola.

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