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Complement therapeutics meets nanomedicine: overcoming human complement activation and leukocyte uptake of nanomedicines with soluble domains of CD55
- Source :
- J Control Release
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Complement activation plays an important role in pharmacokinetic and performance of intravenously administered nanomedicines. Significant efforts have been directed toward engineering of nanosurfaces with low complement activation, but due to promiscuity of complement factors and redundancy of pathways, it is still a major challenge. Cell membrane-anchored Decay Accelerating Factor (DAF, a.k.a. CD55) is an efficient membrane bound complement regulator that inhibits both classical and alternative C3 convertases by accelerating their spontaneous decay. Here we tested the effect of various short consensus repeats (SCRs, “sushi” domains) of human CD55 on nanoparticle-mediated complement activation in human sera and plasma. Structural modeling suggested that SCR-2, SCR-3 and SCR-4 are critical for binding to the alternative pathway C3bBb convertase, whereas SCR-1 is dispensable. Various domains were expressed in E.coli and purified by an affinity column. SCRs were added to lepirudin plasma or sera from different healthy subjects, to monitor nanoparticle-mediated complement activation as well as C3 opsonization. Using superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoworms (SPIO NWs), we found that SCR-2-3-4 was the most effective inhibitor (IC50 ~0.24 μM for C3 opsonization in sera), followed by SCR-1-2-3-4 (IC50 ~0.6 μM), whereas shorter domains (SCR-3, SCR-2-3, SCR-3-4) were ineffective. SCR-2-3-4 also inhibited C5a generation (IC50 ~0.16 μM in sera). In addition to SPIO NWs, SCR-2-3-4 effectively inhibited C3 opsonisation and C5a production by clinically approved nanoparticles (Feraheme, LipoDox and Onivyde). SCR-2-3-4 inhibited both lectin and alternative pathway activation by nanoparticles. When added to lepirudin-anticoagulated blood from healthy donors, it significantly reduced the uptake of SPIO NWs by neutrophils and monocytes. These results suggest that soluble domains of membrane-bound complement inhibitors are potential candidates for preventing nanomedicine-mediated complement activation in human subjects.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Protein Conformation
Cell
Pharmaceutical Science
02 engineering and technology
Complement C3-C5 Convertases
behavioral disciplines and activities
Article
Polyethylene Glycols
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
Lectins
medicine
Leukocytes
Animals
Humans
Magnetite Nanoparticles
Decay-accelerating factor
Complement Activation
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
biology
CD55 Antigens
Chemistry
Lectin
RNA-Binding Proteins
Biological Transport
Complement System Proteins
Middle Aged
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Ferrosoferric Oxide
Complement system
Complement (complexity)
Cell biology
Antibody opsonization
DNA-Binding Proteins
Repressor Proteins
medicine.anatomical_structure
Nanomedicine
Doxorubicin
biology.protein
Alternative complement pathway
0210 nano-technology
Low Complement
Protein Binding
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18734995
- Volume :
- 302
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....65df20e3c7d66e25be094c3027b96502