Prophylactic fibrinolysis through selective dissolution of nascent clots by tPA-carrying erythrocytes

JC Murciano, S Medinilla, D Eslin, E Atochina… - Nature …, 2003 - nature.com
JC Murciano, S Medinilla, D Eslin, E Atochina, DB Cines, VR Muzykantov
Nature biotechnology, 2003nature.com
A fibrinolytic agent consisting of a tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) coupled to the
surface of red blood cells (RBCs) can dissolve nascent clots from within the clot, in a Trojan
horse–like strategy, while having minimal effects on preexisting hemostatic clots or
extravascular tissue. After intravenous injection, the fibrinolytic activity of RBC-tPA persisted
in the bloodstream at least tenfold longer than did that of free tPA. In a model of venous
thrombosis induced by intravenously injected fibrin microemboli aggregating in pulmonary …
Abstract
A fibrinolytic agent consisting of a tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) coupled to the surface of red blood cells (RBCs) can dissolve nascent clots from within the clot, in a Trojan horse–like strategy, while having minimal effects on preexisting hemostatic clots or extravascular tissue. After intravenous injection, the fibrinolytic activity of RBC-tPA persisted in the bloodstream at least tenfold longer than did that of free tPA. In a model of venous thrombosis induced by intravenously injected fibrin microemboli aggregating in pulmonary vasculature, soluble tPA lysed pulmonary clots lodged before but not after tPA injection, whereas the converse was true for RBC-tPA. Free tPA failed to lyse occlusive carotid thrombosis whether injected before or after vascular trauma, whereas RBC-tPA circulating before, but not injected after, thrombus formation restored blood flow. This RBC-based drug delivery strategy alters the fibrinolytic profile of tPA, permitting prophylactic fibrinolysis.
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