Ming Liu, Zhicun Liu, Xiangkai Qiao, Cheng Chen, Hongtu Guo, Hao Gu, Junbo Li, Tiedong Sun
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Nanomotors driven by endogenous enzymes are favored in biology and pharmacy due to their spontaneous driving and efficient biocatalytic activity, and have potential applications in the treatment of clinical diseases that are highly dependent on targeted effects. For diseases such as muscle atrophy, using energy molecules such as ATP to improve cellular metabolism is a relatively efficient treatment method. However, traditional adenosine triphosphate (ATP) therapies for muscle atrophy face limitations due to instability under physiological conditions and poor targeting efficiency. To address these challenges, we developed an endogenous proton-gradient-driven ATP transport motor (ATM), a nanomotor integrating chloroplast-derived FoF1-ATPase with a biocompatible flask-shaped organic shell (FOS). The ATM is synthesized by vacuum-injecting phospholipid-embedded FoF1-ATPase nanothylakoids into ribose-based FOS, enabling autonomous propulsion in acidic microenvironments through proton-driven negative chemotaxis (directional movement away from regions of higher proton concentration). This nanomotor converts proton gradients into ATP synthesis, directly replenishing cellular energy deficits in atrophic tissues. In vitro studies demonstrated high biocompatibility (>90% cell viability at 150 μg/mL) and pH-responsive motility, achieving speeds up to 4.32 μm/s under physiological gradients (ΔpH = 3). In vivo experiments using dexamethasone-induced muscle atrophy mice revealed that ATM treatment accelerated weight recovery and restored normal muscle morphology, with treated mice exhibiting cell sizes comparable to healthy controls (30-40 μm vs. 15-25 μm in untreated). These results highlight the ATM's potential as a precision therapeutic platform for metabolic disorders, leveraging the natural enzyme functionality and synthetic material design to enhance efficacy while minimizing systemic toxicity.
期刊介绍:
Materials (ISSN 1996-1944) is an open access journal of related scientific research and technology development. It publishes reviews, regular research papers (articles) and short communications. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. Therefore, there is no restriction on the length of the papers. The full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. Materials provides a forum for publishing papers which advance the in-depth understanding of the relationship between the structure, the properties or the functions of all kinds of materials. Chemical syntheses, chemical structures and mechanical, chemical, electronic, magnetic and optical properties and various applications will be considered.