SUMMARYNanoparticles (NPs) have the potential to revolutionize drug delivery, however, administering them to the human body without the need for intravenous injection remains a major challenge. In this study, a series of near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent NPs were systematically varied in chemical composition, shape, size, and surface charge, and their biodistribution and elimination were quantified in rat models after lung instillation. We demonstrate that NPs with hydrodynamic diameter (HD) less than ≈ 34 nm and a non-cationic surface charge translocate rapidly from lung to mediastinal lymph nodes. NPs of HD < 6 nm can traffic rapidly from the lungs to lymph nodes and the bloodstream, and then be subsequently cleared by the kidneys. We discuss the importance of these findings to drug delivery, air pollution, and carcinogenesis. KeywordsNanoparticles; nanomedicine; drug delivery; air pollution; lymph node uptake; biodistribution; renal clearance * Co-Senior Authors: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center 330 Brookline Avenue, Room SL-B05 Boston, MA 02215 Phone: 617-667-0692 Fax: 617-667-0981 jfrangio@bidmc.harvard.edu Harvard School of Public Health 665 Huntington Avenue Boston, MA 02115 Phone: 617-432-0127 Fax: 617-432-4710 atsuda@hsph.harvard.edu . AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS H.S.C., Y.A., J.H.L., S.H.K., A.M., N.I., and A.T. performed the experiments. H.S.C., M.G.B., M.S.B., A.T., and J.V.F. reviewed, analyzed, and interpreted the data. H.S.C., A.T., and J.V.F. wrote the paper. All authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript. Nanoparticles (NPs) have been proposed as diagnostic, therapeutic, and theragnostic agents for a wide variety of human diseases. 1-3 Lung-based drug delivery of NPs is receiving increased attention due to the large surface area available and the minimal anatomical barriers limiting access to the body. 4 In this study, we explore whether it would be possible to administer NPs via the lung, and in so doing, attempt to define the key parameters that mediate lung to body NP translocation and subsequent elimination (i.e., clearance). COMPETING INTERESTS STATEMENTLung-administered NPs also have significant implications for air pollution. Recent toxicological studies have confirmed that nano-sized or ultrafine particles reach deep into the alveolar region of the lungs 5,6 and cause severe inflammation reactions due to their large surface areas per mass. 6 Inhalation of NPs is increasingly recognized as a major cause of adverse health effects, and has especially strong influence on the cardiovascular system and hemostasis, leading to increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. [6][7][8] The standard approach for studying the translocation of inhaled NPs and ultrafine air pollutants from the lungs to extrapulmonary compartments in animals is to perform postmortem analysis of tissues after inhalation of carbon-based particles, 9 radiotracers, 10 or neutron-activated metal particles. 11-13 Recently, Moller et al. reported that ultrafine NPs could pass from the lungs into bloodstream an...
We examined the effects of rhythmic expansion of alveolar walls on fluid mechanics in the pulmonary acinus. We generated a realistic geometric model of an alveolated duct that expanded and contracted in a geometrically similar fashion to simulate tidal breathing. Time-dependent volumetric flow was generated by adjusting the proximal and distal boundary conditions. The low Reynolds number velocity field was solved numerically over the physiological range. We found that for a given geometry, the ratio of the alveolar flow (QA) to the ductal flow (QD) played a major role in determining the flow pattern. For larger QA/QD (as in the distal region in the acinus), the flow in the alveolus was largely radial. For small QA/QD (as in the proximal region in the acinus), the flow in the alveolus was slowly rotating and the velocity field near the alveolar opening was complex with a stagnation saddle point typical of chaotic flow structures. Performing Lagrangian fluid particle tracking, we demonstrated that in such a flow structure the motion of fluid could be highly complex, irreversible, and unpredictable even though it was governed by simple deterministic equations. These are the characteristics of chaotic flow behavior. We conclude that because of the unique geometry of alveolated duct and its time-dependent motion associated with tidal breathing, chaotic flow and chaotic mixing can occur in the lung periphery. Based on these novel observations, we suggest a new approach for studying acinar fluid mechanics and aerosol kinetics.
The objectives of this study were (1) to determine whether short-term exposures to concentrated air particles (CAPs) cause pulmonary inflammation in normal rats and rats with chronic bronchitis (CB); (2) to identify the site within the lung parenchyma where CAPs-induced inflammation occurs; and (3) to characterize the component(s) of CAPs that is significantly associated with the development of the inflammatory reaction. Four groups of animals were studied: (1) air treated, filtered air exposed (air-sham); (2) sulfur dioxide treated (CB), filtered air exposed (CB-sham); (3) air treated, CAPs exposed (air-CAPs); and (4) sulfur dioxide treated, CAPs exposed (CB-CAPs). CB and normal rats were exposed by inhalation either to filtered air or CAPs during 3 consecutive days (5 hours/day). Pulmonary inflammation was assessed by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and by measuring the numerical density of neutrophils (Nn) in the alveolar walls at the bronchoalveolar junction and in more peripheral alveoli. CAPs (as a binary exposure term) and CAPs mass (in regression correlations) induced a significant increase in BAL neutrophils and in normal and CB animals. Nn in the lung tissue significantly increased with CAPs in normal animals only. Greater Nn was observed in the central compared with peripheral regions of the lung. A significant dose-dependent association was found between many CAPs components and BAL neutrophils or lymphocytes, but only vanadium and bromine concentrations had significant associations with both BAL neutrophils and Nn in CAPs-exposed groups analyzed together. Results demonstrate that short-term exposures to CAPs from Boston induce a significant inflammatory reaction in rat lungs, with this reaction influenced by particle composition.
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