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  4. Chitosan-based nanogels for selective delivery of photosensitizers to macrophages and improved retention in and therapy of articular joints
 
research article

Chitosan-based nanogels for selective delivery of photosensitizers to macrophages and improved retention in and therapy of articular joints

Schmitt, Frederic
•
Lagopoulos, Lucienne
•
Kaeuper, Peter
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2010
Journal Of Controlled Release

Macrophages play key roles in inflammatory disorders. Therefore, they are targets of treatments aiming at their local destruction in inflammation sites. However, injection of low molecular mass therapeutics, including photosensitizers, in inflamed joints results in their rapid efflux out of the joints, and poor therapeutic index. To improve selective uptake and increase retention of therapeutics in inflamed tissues, hydrophilic nanogels based on chitosan, of which surface was decorated with hyaluronate and which were loaded with one of three different anionic photosensitizers were developed. Optimal uptake of these functionalized nanogels by murine RAW 264.7 or human THP-1 macrophages as models was achieved after <4 h incubation, whereas only negligible uptake by murine fibroblasts used as control cells was observed. The uptake by cells and the intracellular localization of the photosensitizers, of the fluorescein-tagged chitosan and of the rhodamine-tagged hyaluronate were confirmed by fluorescence microscopy. Photodynamic experiments revealed good cell photocytotoxicity of the photosensitizers entrapped in the nanogels. In a mouse model of rheumatoid arthritis, injection of free photosensitizers resulted in their rapid clearance from the joints, while nanogel-encapsulated photosensitizers were retained in the inflamed joints over a longer period of time. The photodynamic treatment of the inflamed joints resulted in a reduction of inflammation comparable to a standard corticoid treatment. Thus, hyaluronate-chitosan nanogels encapsulating therapeutic agents are promising materials for the targeted delivery to macrophages and long-term retention of therapeutics in leaky inflamed articular joints. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.jconrel.2010.02.008
Web of Science ID

WOS:000278652800018

Author(s)
Schmitt, Frederic
Lagopoulos, Lucienne
Kaeuper, Peter
Rossi, Nathanael  
Busso, Nathalie
Barge, Jerome
Wagnières, Georges  
Laue, Carsten
Wandrey, Christine  
Juillerat-Jeanneret, Lucienne
Date Issued

2010

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Journal Of Controlled Release
Volume

144

Start page

242

End page

250

Subjects

Chitosan

•

Hyaluronate

•

Nanogels

•

Macrophages

•

Rheumatoid arthritis

•

Photodynamic therapy

•

Antigen-Induced Arthritis

•

Transdermal Photodynamic Therapy

•

Rheumatoid-Arthritis

•

Oxide Nanoparticles

•

Vaccine Delivery

•

Gene Delivery

•

In-Vitro

•

Protein

•

Cancer

•

Mice

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GR-VDB  
LMRP  
GPM  
Available on Infoscience
February 24, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/64825
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