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pH-degradable, bisphosphonate-loaded nanogels attenuate liver fibrosis by repolarization of M2-type macrophages.

Leonard KapsAnne HuppertsbergNiklas ChoteschovskyAdrian KlefenzFeyza DurakBarbara SchrörsMustafa DikenEmma EichlerSebastian RosigkeitSascha SchmittChristian LepsAlicia PoplawskiFriedrich FörsterErnesto BockampBruno G De GeestKaloian KoynovHans-Joachim RäderStefan TenzerFederico MariniDetlef SchuppanLutz Nuhn
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Immune-suppressive (M2-type) macrophages can contribute to the progression of cancer and fibrosis. In chronic liver diseases, M2-type macrophages promote the replacement of functional parenchyma by collagen-rich scar tissue. Here, we aim to prevent liver fibrosis progression by repolarizing liver M2-type macrophages toward a nonfibrotic phenotype by applying a pH-degradable, squaric ester–based nanogel carrier system. This nanotechnology platform enables a selective conjugation of the highly water-soluble bisphosphonate alendronate, a macrophage-repolarizing agent that intrinsically targets bone tissue. The covalent delivery system, however, promotes the drug’s safe and efficient delivery to nonparenchymal cells of fibrotic livers after intravenous administration. The bisphosphonate payload does not eliminate but instead reprograms profibrotic M2- toward antifibrotic M1-type macrophages in vitro and potently prevents liver fibrosis progression in vivo, mainly via induction of a fibrolytic phenotype, as demonstrated by transcriptomic and proteomic analyses. Therefore, the alendronate-loaded squaric ester–based nanogels represent an attractive approach for nanotherapeutic interventions in fibrosis and other diseases driven by M2-type macrophages, including cancer.
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