Designer nanoparticles with controlled shapes and sizes are increasingly popular vehicles for therapeutic delivery due to their enhanced cell-delivery performance. However, our ability to fashion nanoparticles has offered only limited control over these parameters. Structural DNA nanotechnology has an unparalleled ability to self-assemble three-dimensional nanostructures with near-atomic resolution features, and thus, it offers an attractive platform for the systematic exploration of the parameter space relevant to nanoparticle uptake by living cells. In this study, we examined the cell uptake of a panel of 11 distinct DNA-origami shapes, with the largest dimension ranging from 50-400 nm, in 3 different cell lines. We found that larger particles with a greater compactness were preferentially internalized compared with elongated, high-aspect-ratio particles. Uptake kinetics were also found to be more cell-type-dependent than shape-dependent, with specialized endocytosing dendritic cells failing to saturate over 12 h of study. The knowledge gained in the current study furthers our understanding of how particle shape affects cellular uptake and heralds the development of DNA nanotechnologies toward the improvement of current state-of-the-art cell-delivery vehicles.
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) cause pulmonary infections in patients with structural lung damage, impaired immunity, or other risk factors. Delivering antibiotics to the sites of these infections is a major hurdle of therapy because pulmonary NTM infections can persist in biofilms or as intracellular infections within macrophages. Inhaled treatments can improve antibiotic delivery into the lungs, but efficient nebulization delivery, distribution throughout the lungs, and penetration into biofilms and macrophages are considerable challenges for this approach. Therefore, we developed amikacin liposome inhalation suspension (ALIS) to overcome these challenges. Nebulization of ALIS has been shown to provide particles within the respirable size range that distribute to both central and peripheral lung compartments in humans. The in vitro and in vivo efficacy of ALIS against NTM has been demonstrated previously. The key mechanistic questions are whether ALIS penetrates NTM biofilms and enhances amikacin uptake into macrophages. We found that ALIS effectively penetrated throughout NTM biofilms and concentration-dependently reduced the number of viable mycobacteria. Additionally, we found that ALIS improved amikacin uptake by ∼4-fold into cultured macrophages compared with free amikacin. In rats, inhaled ALIS increased amikacin concentrations in pulmonary macrophages by 5- to 8-fold at 2, 6, and 24 h post-dose and retained more amikacin at 24 h in airways and lung tissue relative to inhaled free amikacin. Compared to intravenous free amikacin, a standard-of-care therapy for refractory and severe NTM lung disease, ALIS increased the mean area under the concentration-time curve in lung tissue, airways, and macrophages by 42-, 69-, and 274-fold. These data demonstrate that ALIS effectively penetrates NTM biofilms, enhances amikacin uptake into macrophages, both in vitro and in vivo, and retains amikacin within airways and lung tissue. An ongoing Phase III trial, adding ALIS to guideline based therapy, met its primary endpoint of culture conversion by month 6. ALIS represents a promising new treatment approach for patients with refractory NTM lung disease.
Treprostinil (TRE), a prostanoid analogue approved in the USA for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension, requires continuous infusion or multiple dosing sessions per day for inhaled and oral routes of administration due to its short half-life. The inhaled drug is known to induce adverse systemic and local effects including headache, nausea, cough, and throat irritation which may be due at least in part to transiently high drug concentrations in the lungs and plasma immediately following administration [1]. To ameliorate these side effects and reduce dosing frequency we designed an inhaled slow-release TRE formulation. TRE was chemically modified to be an alkyl prodrug (TPD) which was then packaged into a lipid nanoparticle (LNP) carrier. Preclinical screening in a rat model of hypoxia-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction led to selection of a 16-carbon alkyl ester derivative of TRE. The TPD-LNP demonstrated approximately 10-fold lower TRE plasma C compared to inhaled TRE solution while maintaining an extended vasodilatory effect. The favorable PK profile is attributed to gradual dissociation of TPD from the LNP and subsequent conversion to TRE. Together, this sustained presentation of TRE to the lungs and plasma is consistent with a once- or twice-daily dosing schedule in the absence of high C-associated adverse events which could provide patients with an improved treprostinil therapy.
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