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Neutrophil-targeted, protease-activated pulmonary drug delivery blocks airway and systemic inflammation
Joscelyn C. Mejías, Osric A. Forrest, Camilla Margaroli, David A. Frey Rubio, Liliana Viera, Jindong Li, Xin Xu, Amit Gaggar, Rabindra Tirouvanziam, Krishnendu Roy
Joscelyn C. Mejías, Osric A. Forrest, Camilla Margaroli, David A. Frey Rubio, Liliana Viera, Jindong Li, Xin Xu, Amit Gaggar, Rabindra Tirouvanziam, Krishnendu Roy
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Research Article Inflammation Pulmonology

Neutrophil-targeted, protease-activated pulmonary drug delivery blocks airway and systemic inflammation

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Abstract

Pulmonary drug delivery presents a unique opportunity to target lower airway inflammation, which is often characterized by the massive recruitment of neutrophils from blood. However, specific therapies are lacking modulation of airway neutrophil function, and difficult challenges must be overcome to achieve therapeutic efficacy against pulmonary inflammation, notably drug hydrophobicity, mucociliary and macrophage-dependent clearance, and high extracellular protease burden. Here, we present a multistage, aerodynamically favorable delivery platform that uses extracellular proteolysis to its advantage to deliver nanoparticle-embedded hydrophobic drugs to neutrophils within the lower airways. Our design consists of a self-regulated nanoparticle-in-microgel system, in which microgel activation is triggered by extracellular elastase (degranulated by inflammatory neutrophils), and nanoparticles are loaded with Nexinhib20, a potent neutrophil degranulation inhibitor. Successful in vivo delivery of Nexinhib20 to the airways and into neutrophils promoted resolution of the inflammatory response by dampening neutrophil recruitment and degranulation, proinflammatory cytokine production in both airway and systemic compartments, as well as the presence of neutrophil-derived pathological extracellular vesicles in the lung fluid. Our findings showcase a new platform that overcomes challenges in pulmonary drug delivery and allows customization to match the proteolytic footprint of given diseases.

Authors

Joscelyn C. Mejías, Osric A. Forrest, Camilla Margaroli, David A. Frey Rubio, Liliana Viera, Jindong Li, Xin Xu, Amit Gaggar, Rabindra Tirouvanziam, Krishnendu Roy

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Figure 3

N-in-M delivery of Nexinhib20 attenuates neutrophilic inflammation.

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N-in-M delivery of Nexinhib20 attenuates neutrophilic inflammation.
(A) ...
(A) Blood showed no detectable signs of neutrophilia or neutropenia. Lung lysate absolute PMN count (B) and presence of myeloperoxidase-positive PMNs in the tissue (C) were decreased upon treatment with Nexinhib20. In the BAL, expected increases following LPS treatment of PMN absolute count (D) and percentage (E) were abrogated in the Nexinhib20 treatment group, concomitant with PMN uptake of the N-in-M system (F), as measured by DiR nanoparticle fluorescence. Saline was administered to the control group. Box plots show median, IQR, and min to max. Statistical tests: Shapiro-Wilk followed by 1-way ANOVA (E and F) and Kruskal-Wallis (A, B, and D), with *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, and ****P < 0.0001 between groups indicated. n = 5 per group.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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