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Reciprocal Interaction with Neutrophils Facilitates Cutaneous Accumulation of Liposomes.

Tianhao DingYang WangYanchun MengErcan WuQianwen ShaoShiqi LinYifei YuJun QianQin HeJian ZhangJing WangDaniel S KohaneChangyou Zhan
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Liposomes are versatile drug delivery systems in clinical use for cancer and many other diseases. Unfortunately, PEGylated liposomal doxorubicin (sLip/DOX) exhibits serious dose-limiting cutaneous toxicities, which are closely related to the extravascular accumulation of sLip/DOX in the dermis. No clinical interventions have been proposed for cutaneous toxicities due to the elusive transport pathways. Herein, we showed that the reciprocal interaction between liposomes and neutrophils played pivotal roles in liposome extravasation into the dermis. Neutrophils captured liposomes via the complement receptor 3 (CD11b/CD18) recognizing the fragment of complement component C3 (iC3b) deposited on the liposomal surface. Uptake of liposomes also activated neutrophils to induce CD11b upregulation and enhanced the ability of neutrophils to migrate outside the capillaries. Furthermore, inhibition of complement activation either by CRIg-L-FH (a C3b/iC3b targeted complement inhibitor) or blocking the phosphate negative charge in mPEG-DSPE could significantly reduce liposome uptake by neutrophils and alleviate the cutaneous accumulation of liposomes. These results validated the liposome extravasation pathway mediated by neutrophils and provided potential solutions to the devastating cutaneous toxicities occurring during sLip/DOX treatment.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • cancer therapy
  • papillary thyroid
  • cell proliferation
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • squamous cell