Abstract
Endothelial cells exhibit distinct properties in morphology and functions in different organs that can be exploited for nanomedicine targeting. In this work, endothelial cells from different organs, i.e. brain, lung, liver, and kidney, were exposed to plain, carboxylated, and amino-modified silica. As expected, different protein coronas were formed on the different nanoparticle types and these changed when foetal bovine serum (FBS) or human serum were used. Uptake efficiencies differed strongly in the different endothelia, confirming that the cells retained some of their organ-specific differences. However, all endothelia showed higher uptake for the amino-modified silica in FBS, but, interestingly, this changed to the carboxylated silica when human serum was used, confirming that differences in the protein corona affect uptake preferences by cells. Thus, uptake rates of fluid phase markers and transferrin were determined in liver and brain endothelium to compare their endocytic activity. Overall, our results showed that endothelial cells of different organs have very different nanoparticle uptake efficiency, likely due to differences in receptor expression, affinity, and activity. A thorough characterization of phenotypic differences in the endothelia lining different organs is key to the development of targeted nanomedicine.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 119699 |
Journal | International Journal of Pharmaceutics |
Volume | 587 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 25 Sep 2020 |
Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
Funding
Pierre-Olivier Couraud (Institute Cochin) is acknowledged for providing hCMEC/D3. Ingrid Molema and Henk Moorlag (Endothelial Biomedicine & Vascular Drug Targeting, UMCG) are acknowledged for the useful discussions on endothelial cell models and the support with the ciGENC cell culture. Edwin de Jong is acknowledged for the support with hCMEC/D3 cell culture. This work was partially funded by the European Research Council (Grant agreement: N °637614). A. S. kindly acknowledges the University of Groningen for additional funding (Rosalind Franklin Fellowship).
Funders | Funder number |
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Horizon 2020 Framework Programme | 637614 |
European Commission | |
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen |
Keywords
- Endothelial cell targeting
- Endothelial cells
- Heterogeneity
- Protein corona
- Uptake