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1.
Pharmaceutics ; 13(11)2021 Oct 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34834231

RESUMO

Vascular interventions result in the disruption of the tunica intima and the exposure of sub-endothelial matrix proteins. Nanoparticles designed to bind to these exposed matrices could provide targeted drug delivery systems aimed at inhibiting dysfunctional vascular remodeling and improving intervention outcomes. Here, we present the progress in the development of targeted liposomal nanocarriers designed for preferential collagen IV binding under simulated static vascular flow conditions. PEGylated liposomes (PLPs), previously established as effective delivery systems in vascular cells types, served as non-targeting controls. Collagen-targeting liposomes (CT-PLPs) were formed by conjugating established collagen-binding peptides to modified lipid heads via click chemistry (CTL), and inserting them at varying mol% either at the time of PLP assembly or via micellar transfer. All groups included fluorescently labeled lipid species for imaging and quantification. Liposomes were exposed to collagen IV matrices statically or via hemodynamic flow, and binding was measured via fluorometric analyses. CT-PLPs formed with 5 mol% CTL at the time of assembly demonstrated the highest binding affinity to collagen IV under static conditions, while maintaining a nanoparticle characterization profile of ~50 nm size and a homogeneity polydispersity index (PDI) of ~0.2 favorable for clinical translation. When liposomes were exposed to collagen matrices within a pressurized flow system, empirically defined CT-PLPs demonstrated significant binding at shear stresses mimetic of physiological through pathological conditions in both the venous and arterial architectures. Furthermore, when human saphenous vein explants were perfused with liposomes within a closed bioreactor system, CT-PLPs demonstrated significant ex vivo binding to diseased vascular tissue. Ongoing studies aim to further develop CT-PLPs for controlled targeting in a rodent model of vascular injury. The CT-PLP nanocarriers established here show promise as the framework for a spatially controlled delivery platform for future application in targeted vascular therapeutics.

2.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(3)2021 Mar 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33807086

RESUMO

Lipid nanoparticles have become increasingly popular delivery platforms in the field of gene therapy, but bench-to-bedside success has been limited. Many liposomal gene vectors are comprised of synthetic cationic lipids, which are associated with lipid-induced cytotoxicity and immunogenicity. Natural, non-cationic PEGylated liposomes (PLPs) demonstrate favorable biocompatibility profiles but are not considered viable gene delivery vehicles due to inefficient nucleic acid loading and reduced cellular uptake. PLPs can be modified with cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) to enhance the intracellular delivery of liposomal cargo but encapsulate leakage upon CPP-PLP assembly is problematic. Here, we aimed to identify parameters that overcome these performance barriers by incorporating nucleic acid condensers during CPP-PLP assembly and screening variable ethanol injection parameters for optimization. CPP-PLPs were formed with R8-amphiphiles via pre-insertion, post-insertion and post-conjugation techniques and liposomes were characterized for size, surface charge, homogeneity, siRNA encapsulation efficiency and retention and cell associative properties. Herein we demonstrate that pre-insertion of stearylated R8 into PLPs is an efficient method to produce non-cationic CPP-PLPs and we provide additional assembly parameter specifications for a modified ethanol injection technique that is optimized for siRNA encapsulation/retention and enhanced cell association. This assembly technique could provide improved clinical translation of liposomal based gene therapy applications.

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