Temperature- and rigidity-mediated rapid transport of lipid nanovesicles in hydrogels.
Miaorong YuWenyi SongFalin TianZhuo DaiQuanlei ZhuEjaj AhmadShiyan GuoChunliu ZhuHaijun ZhongYongchun YuanTao ZhangXin YiXinghua ShiYong GanHuajian GaoPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Lipid nanovesicles are widely present as transport vehicles in living organisms and can serve as efficient drug delivery vectors. It is known that the size and surface charge of nanovesicles can affect their diffusion behaviors in biological hydrogels such as mucus. However, how temperature effects, including those of both ambient temperature and phase transition temperature (T m), influence vehicle transport across various biological barriers outside and inside the cell remains unclear. Here, we utilize a series of liposomes with different T m as typical models of nanovesicles to examine their diffusion behavior in vitro in biological hydrogels. We observe that the liposomes gain optimal diffusivity when their T m is around the ambient temperature, which signals a drastic change in the nanovesicle rigidity, and that liposomes with T m around body temperature (i.e., ∼37 °C) exhibit enhanced cellular uptake in mucus-secreting epithelium and show significant improvement in oral insulin delivery efficacy in diabetic rats compared with those with higher or lower T m Molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations and superresolution microscopy reveal a temperature- and rigidity-mediated rapid transport mechanism in which the liposomes frequently deform into an ellipsoidal shape near the phase transition temperature during diffusion in biological hydrogels. These findings enhance our understanding of the effect of temperature and rigidity on extracellular and intracellular functions of nanovesicles such as endosomes, exosomes, and argosomes, and suggest that matching T m to ambient temperature could be a feasible way to design highly efficient nanovesicle-based drug delivery vectors.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- molecular dynamics
- drug release
- cancer therapy
- air pollution
- highly efficient
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- diabetic rats
- gene expression
- single cell
- mass spectrometry
- extracellular matrix
- cell therapy
- density functional theory
- insulin resistance
- tissue engineering
- fatty acid
- gene therapy