1 research outputs found
Porous Silicon Nanocarriers Boost the Immunomodulation of Mitochondria-Targeted Bovine Serum Albumins on Macrophage Polarization
The development of nanosystems with intrinsic immunomodulatory
effects on macrophage polarization is important for the macrophage-targeted
immunotherapy. Here, mitochondria-targeted bovine serum albumins (BSAs)
via the conjugation of fluorescent, lipophilic, and cationic rhodamine
110 molecules can efficiently enhance the gene expression of the proinflammatory
phenotype of macrophages and correspondingly inhibit the gene expression
of their anti-inflammatory phenotype. On this basis, porous silicon
nanocarriers can further boost the immunomodulation of these mitochondria-targeted
BSAs in vitro or in vivo, accompanied
by the secretion of proinflammatory mediators including tumor necrosis
factor α, nitric oxide, and reactive oxygen species (ROS). Meanwhile,
BSA coatings can also improve the biocompatibility of porous silicon
nanoparticulate cores on macrophages. Finally, the mechanism investigations
demonstrate that porous silicon nanocarriers can efficiently deliver
mitochondria-targeted BSA into macrophages to generate mitochondrial
ROS via the interference with mitochondrial respiratory chains, which
can further trigger the downstream signaling transduction pathways
for the proinflammatory transition. Considering the good biosafety
and versatile loading capability, this developed porous silicon@BSA
nanosystem with a strong proinflmmatory regulatory effect has important
potential on the combinatorial chemoimmunotherapy against cancer or
viral/bacterial-related infectious diseases