Title
Changes in the nanoparticle uptake and distribution caused by an intramacrophagic parasitic infection
Date Issued
07 November 2021
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Calvo A.
Moreno E.
Clemente U.
Pérez E.
Larrea E.
Sanmartín C.
Irache J.M.
Espuelas S.
Publisher(s)
Royal Society of Chemistry
Abstract
This study investigates if visceral leishmaniasis (VL) infection has some effects on the organ and cellular uptake and distribution of 100-200 nm near-infrared fluorescently labelled non-biodegradable polystyrene latex beads (PS NPs) or biodegradable polylactic-co-glycolic nanoparticles (PLGA NPs), as this parasitic infection produces morphological alterations in liver, spleen and bone marrow, organs highly involved in NP sequestration. The results showed that the magnitude of the effect was specific for each organ and type of NP. With the exception of the liver, the general trend was a decrease in NP organ and cellular uptake, mostly due to immune cell mobilization and/or weight organ gain, as vascular permeability was increased. Moreover, NPs redistributed among different phagocytic cells to adapt infection associated changes and cellular alterations. In the liver, it is noteworthy that only isolated Kuffer cells (KCs) captured NPs, whereas they were not taken up by KC forming granulomas. In the spleen, NPs redistributed from macrophages and dendritic cells towards B cells and inflammatory monocytes although they maintained their preferential accumulation in the marginal zone and red pulp. Comparatively, the infection rarely affected the NP cellular distribution in the bone marrow. NP cellular target changes in VL infection could affect their therapeutic efficacy and should be considered for more efficient drug delivery. This journal is
Start page
17486
End page
17503
Volume
13
Issue
41
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Parasitología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85118717285
PubMed ID
Source
Nanoscale
ISSN of the container
20403364
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by the Government of Navarra (Ayudas a Centros Tecnológicos y Organismos de Investigación y difusión de conocimientos para la realización de proyectos de I+D, PI045, PI068), The Institute of Tropical Health (ISTUN, University of Navarra) and funders (Obra Social La Caixa and Fundación Caja Navarra, Fundación Roviralta, PROFAND, Ubesol, ACUNSA and Artai).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus