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The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells

Red blood cells (RBCs) can be used for vascular delivery of encapsulated or surface-bound drugs and carriers. Coupling to RBC prolongs circulation of nanoparticles (NP, 200 nm spheres, a conventional model of polymeric drug delivery carrier) enabling their transfer to the pulmonary vasculature witho...

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Autores principales: Pan, Daniel, Vargas-Morales, Omayra, Zern, Blaine, Anselmo, Aaron C., Gupta, Vivek, Zakrewsky, Michael, Mitragotri, Samir, Muzykantov, Vladimir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4803339/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27003833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152074
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author Pan, Daniel
Vargas-Morales, Omayra
Zern, Blaine
Anselmo, Aaron C.
Gupta, Vivek
Zakrewsky, Michael
Mitragotri, Samir
Muzykantov, Vladimir
author_facet Pan, Daniel
Vargas-Morales, Omayra
Zern, Blaine
Anselmo, Aaron C.
Gupta, Vivek
Zakrewsky, Michael
Mitragotri, Samir
Muzykantov, Vladimir
author_sort Pan, Daniel
collection PubMed
description Red blood cells (RBCs) can be used for vascular delivery of encapsulated or surface-bound drugs and carriers. Coupling to RBC prolongs circulation of nanoparticles (NP, 200 nm spheres, a conventional model of polymeric drug delivery carrier) enabling their transfer to the pulmonary vasculature without provoking overt RBC elimination. However, little is known about more subtle and potentially harmful effects of drugs and drug carriers on RBCs. Here we devised high-throughput in vitro assays to determine the sensitivity of loaded RBCs to osmotic stress and other damaging insults that they may encounter in vivo (e.g. mechanical, oxidative and complement insults). Sensitivity of these tests is inversely proportional to RBC concentration in suspension and our results suggest that mouse RBCs are more sensitive to damaging factors than human RBCs. Loading RBCs by NP at 1:50 ratio did not affect RBCs, while 10–50 fold higher NP load accentuated RBC damage by mechanical, osmotic and oxidative stress. This extensive loading of RBC by NP also leads to RBCs agglutination in buffer; however, addition of albumin diminished this effect. These results provide a template for analyses of the effects of diverse cargoes loaded on carrier RBCs and indicate that: i) RBCs can tolerate carriage of NP at doses providing loading of millions of nanoparticles per microliter of blood; ii) tests using protein-free buffers and mouse RBCs may overestimate adversity that may be encountered in humans.
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spelling pubmed-48033392016-03-25 The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells Pan, Daniel Vargas-Morales, Omayra Zern, Blaine Anselmo, Aaron C. Gupta, Vivek Zakrewsky, Michael Mitragotri, Samir Muzykantov, Vladimir PLoS One Research Article Red blood cells (RBCs) can be used for vascular delivery of encapsulated or surface-bound drugs and carriers. Coupling to RBC prolongs circulation of nanoparticles (NP, 200 nm spheres, a conventional model of polymeric drug delivery carrier) enabling their transfer to the pulmonary vasculature without provoking overt RBC elimination. However, little is known about more subtle and potentially harmful effects of drugs and drug carriers on RBCs. Here we devised high-throughput in vitro assays to determine the sensitivity of loaded RBCs to osmotic stress and other damaging insults that they may encounter in vivo (e.g. mechanical, oxidative and complement insults). Sensitivity of these tests is inversely proportional to RBC concentration in suspension and our results suggest that mouse RBCs are more sensitive to damaging factors than human RBCs. Loading RBCs by NP at 1:50 ratio did not affect RBCs, while 10–50 fold higher NP load accentuated RBC damage by mechanical, osmotic and oxidative stress. This extensive loading of RBC by NP also leads to RBCs agglutination in buffer; however, addition of albumin diminished this effect. These results provide a template for analyses of the effects of diverse cargoes loaded on carrier RBCs and indicate that: i) RBCs can tolerate carriage of NP at doses providing loading of millions of nanoparticles per microliter of blood; ii) tests using protein-free buffers and mouse RBCs may overestimate adversity that may be encountered in humans. Public Library of Science 2016-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4803339/ /pubmed/27003833 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152074 Text en © 2016 Pan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pan, Daniel
Vargas-Morales, Omayra
Zern, Blaine
Anselmo, Aaron C.
Gupta, Vivek
Zakrewsky, Michael
Mitragotri, Samir
Muzykantov, Vladimir
The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title_full The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title_fullStr The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title_short The Effect of Polymeric Nanoparticles on Biocompatibility of Carrier Red Blood Cells
title_sort effect of polymeric nanoparticles on biocompatibility of carrier red blood cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4803339/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27003833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152074
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