利用同型识别纳米囊泡对细胞内细菌的分子靶向治疗感染性肺炎。

IF 8.1 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Biomaterials research Pub Date : 2025-04-02 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.34133/bmr.0172
Xu Wang, Hao Zhou, Dan Li, Zhe Zhao, Ke Peng, Xiang Xu, Jia-Jia Wang, Yang Wang, Jun Wang, Jing-Jing Zhang, Shuang-Shuang Wan, Mai-Qing Shi, Jun Chen, Xian-Guang Ding, Fu-Hai Ji
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管已经实施了广泛的抗生素方案来解决病原体感染的肺炎,但现有的策略在对抗细胞内细菌(抗生素耐药性的主要贡献者)的功效方面受到限制。此外,在抗生素治疗期间同时发生的细胞因子风暴对病原体引起的肺炎的管理构成了巨大的障碍。在本研究中,研究人员开发了一种感染靶向系统,利用m2巨噬细胞来源的囊泡[外泌体(Exos)]作为传递抗生素的载体(antibiotics@Exos),用于有效的肺炎管理。所提出的系统可以使抗生素通过同型识别特异性递送到肺炎感染的巨噬细胞,并被发现表现出特殊的细胞内杀菌作用。此外,m2型囊泡在将炎性巨噬细胞重编程为抗炎表型方面表现出高度的效率。结果发现antibiotics@Exos可显著降低急性肺损伤小鼠肺内浸润炎性细胞水平,减轻炎性因子风暴。这种干预减轻了活性氧引起的损伤,减少了肺水肿,并成功治疗了肺炎。这种具有生物活性的囊泡给药系统有效地弥补了传统抗生素治疗方案的局限性,具有多元化的效果,为严重传染病特别是急性肺炎的治疗开辟了新的策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Molecular Targeting of Intracellular Bacteria by Homotypic Recognizing Nanovesicles for Infected Pneumonia Treatment.

Although extensive antibiotic regimens have been implemented to address pathogen-infected pneumonia, existing strategies are constrained in their efficacy against intracellular bacteria, a prominent contributor to antibiotic resistance. In addition, the concurrent occurrence of a cytokine storm during antibiotic therapy presents a formidable obstacle in the management of pneumonia caused by pathogens. In the present study, an infection-targeting system that leverages M2-macrophage-derived vesicles [exosomes (Exos)] as vehicles to convey antibiotics (antibiotics@Exos) was developed for effective pneumonia management. The proposed system can enable antibiotics to be specifically delivered to infected macrophages in pneumonia through homotypic recognition and was found to exhibit an exceptional intracellular bactericidal effect. Moreover, M2-type vesicles exhibit a high degree of efficiency in reprogramming inflammatory macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory phenotype. As a result, the administration of antibiotics@Exos was found to substantical decrease the level of the infiltrated inflammatory cells and alleviate the inflammatory factor storm in the lungs of acute lung injury mice. This intervention resulted in the alleviation of reactive-oxygen-species-induced damage, reduction of pulmonary edema, and successful pneumonia treatment. This bioactive vesicle delivery system effectively compensates for the limitations of traditional antibiotic therapy regimens with pluralism effects, paving a new strategy for serious infectious diseases, especially acute pneumonia treatment.

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