1 research outputs found
Manganese Carbonyl-Loaded Hollow Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles Coated with Neutrophil Membranes for Acute Kidney Injury Therapy
Acute kidney injury (AKI) has a very
high incidence in hospitalized
patients, but it lacks effective therapy clinically. Its pathogenesis
is associated with capillary hypoperfusion around renal tubules, production
of reactive oxygen free radicals (ROS), and infiltration of inflammatory
cells. Endogenous carbon monoxide (CO) can protect cells or organs
by vasodilation, anti-inflammation, and reducing oxidative stress
injury. However, direct exogenous CO supplementation is difficult
to control the exact dose, and excessive CO has obvious toxicity,
which is difficult to be applied in clinical treatment. In this study,
we constructed H2O2-responsive nanomedicine
for CO therapy of AKI by loading manganese carbonyl (MnCO) onto the
hollow mesoporous silicon nanoparticles (hMSN), which were coated
with a neutrophil membrane with the insertion of phosphatidylserine
(PS) into the membrane surface (MnCO@hMSN@NM-PS). MnCO@hMSN@NM-PS
was located in the renal tubules of AKI through the biomimetic chemotaxis
of the neutrophil membrane to the inflammation site and the active
binding of PS to kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), which was overexpressed
in damaged renal tubular epithelial cells. MnCO@hMSN@NM-PS had a good
protective effect on oxidative damage of renal tubular cells in vitro and glycerol-induced AKI in vivo. MnCO@hMSN@NM-PS offers hope for the treatment of AKI
