首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Using shape effects to target antibody-coated nanoparticles to lung and brain endothelium
Authors:Poornima Kolhar  Aaron C. Anselmo  Vivek Gupta  Kapil Pant  Balabhaskar Prabhakarpandian  Erkki Ruoslahti  Samir Mitragotri
Affiliation:aBiomolecular Science and Engineering, and;Departments of bChemical Engineering and;dMolecular Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106;;cCFD Research Corporation, Huntsville, AL, 35805; and;eSanford–Burnham Medical Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, 92037
Abstract:Vascular endothelium offers a variety of therapeutic targets for the treatment of cancer, cardiovascular diseases, inflammation, and oxidative stress. Significant research has been focused on developing agents to target the endothelium in diseased tissues. This includes identification of antibodies against adhesion molecules and neovascular expression markers or peptides discovered using phage display. Such targeting molecules also have been used to deliver nanoparticles to the endothelium of the diseased tissue. Here we report, based on in vitro and in vivo studies, that the specificity of endothelial targeting can be enhanced further by engineering the shape of ligand-displaying nanoparticles. In vitro studies performed using microfluidic systems that mimic the vasculature (synthetic microvascular networks) showed that rod-shaped nanoparticles exhibit higher specific and lower nonspecific accumulation under flow at the target compared with their spherical counterparts. Mathematical modeling of particle–surface interactions suggests that the higher avidity and specificity of nanorods originate from the balance of polyvalent interactions that favor adhesion and entropic losses as well as shear-induced detachment that reduce binding. In vivo experiments in mice confirmed that shape-induced enhancement of vascular targeting is also observed under physiological conditions in lungs and brain for nanoparticles displaying anti–intracellular adhesion molecule 1 and anti-transferrin receptor antibodies.
Keywords:biodistribution   morphology   SMN   cylinder   drug delivery
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号