Autoantigen-Dexamethasone Conjugate-Loaded Liposomes Halt Arthritis Development in Mice.
Naomi BenneDaniëlle Ter BraakeDeja PorentaChun Yin Jerry LauEnrico MastrobattistaFemke BroerePublished in: Advanced healthcare materials (2024)
There is no curative treatment for chronic auto-inflammatory diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, and current treatments can induce off-target side effects due to systemic immune suppression. This work has previously shown that dexamethasone-pulsed tolerogenic dendritic cells loaded with the arthritis-specific antigen human proteoglycan can suppress arthritis development in a proteoglycan-induced arthritis mouse model. To circumvent ex vivo dendritic cell culture, and enhance antigen-specific effects, drug delivery vehicles, such as liposomes, provide an interesting approach. Here, this work uses anionic 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol liposomes with enhanced loading of human proteoglycan-dexamethasone conjugates by cationic lysine tetramer addition. Antigen-pulsed tolerogenic dendritic cells induced by liposomal dexamethasone in vitro enhanced antigen-specific regulatory T cells to a similar extent as dexamethasone-induced tolerogenic dendritic cells. In an inflammatory adoptive transfer model, mice injected with antigen-dexamethasone liposomes have significantly higher antigen-specific type 1 regulatory T cells than mice injected with antigen only. The liposomes significantly inhibit the progression of arthritis compared to controls in preventative and therapeutic proteoglycan-induced arthritis mouse models. This coincides with systemic tolerance induction and an increase in IL10 expression in the paws of mice. In conclusion, a single administration of autoantigen and dexamethasone-loaded liposomes seems to be a promising antigen-specific treatment strategy for arthritis in mice.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- drug delivery
- regulatory t cells
- rheumatoid arthritis
- cancer therapy
- high dose
- low dose
- drug release
- high fat diet induced
- mouse model
- immune response
- endothelial cells
- high glucose
- disease activity
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- ankylosing spondylitis
- poor prognosis
- wild type
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stem cells
- interstitial lung disease
- metabolic syndrome
- bone marrow
- combination therapy
- smoking cessation
- adipose tissue