Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is the sole approved therapeutic molecule for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke. Yet, only a small percentage of patients could benefit from this life-saving treatment because of medical contraindications and severe side effects, including brain hemorrhage, associated with delayed administration. Here, a nano therapeutic agent is realized by directly associating the clinical formulation of tPA to the porous structure of soft discoidal polymeric nanoconstructs (tPA-DPNs). The porous matrix of DPNs protects tPA from rapid degradation, allowing tPA-DPNs to preserve over 70 % of the tPA original activity after 3 h of exposure to serum proteins. Under dynamic conditions, tPA-DPNs dissolve clots more efficiently than free tPA, as demonstrated in a microfluidic chip where clots are formed mimicking in vivo conditions. At 60 min post treatment initiation, the clot area reduces by half (57 + 8 %) with tPA-DPNs, whereas a similar result (56 + 21 %) is obtained only after 90 min for free tPA. In murine mesentery venules, the intravenous administration of 2.5 mg/kg of tPA-DPNs resolves almost 90 % of the blood clots, whereas a similar dose of free tPA successfully recanalize only about 40 % of the treated vessels. At about 1/10 of the clinical dose (1.0 mg/kg), tPA-DPNs still effectively dissolve 70 % of the clots, whereas free tPA works efficiently only on 16 % of the vessels. In vivo, discoidal tPA-DPNs outperform the lytic activity of 200 nm spherical tPA-coated nanoconstructs in terms of both percentage of successful recanalization events and clot area reduction. The conjugation of tPA with preserved lytic activity, the deformability and blood circulating time of DPNs together with the faster blood clot dissolution would make tPA-DPNs a promising nanotool for enhancing both potency and safety of thrombolytic therapies.
Aminobisphosphonates, such as zoledronic acid (ZA), have shown potential in the treatment of different malignancies, including colorectal carcinoma (CRC). Yet, their clinical exploitation is limited by their high bone affinity and modest bioavailability. Here, ZA is encapsulated into the aqueous core of spherical polymeric nanoparticles (SPNs), whose size and architecture resemble that of biological vesicles. On Vδ2 T cells, derived from the peripheral blood of healthy donors and CRC patients, ZA-SPNs induce proliferation and trigger activation up to three orders of magnitude more efficiently than soluble ZA. These activated Vδ2 T cells kill CRC cells and tumor spheroids, and are able to migrate toward CRC cells in a microfluidic system. Notably, ZA-SPNs can also stimulate the proliferation of Vδ2 T cells from the tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes of CRC patients and boost their cytotoxic activity against patients’ autologous tumor organoids. These data represent a first step toward the use of nanoformulated ZA for immunotherapy in CRC patients.
Metastases are the primary cause of death in cancer patients. Small animal models are helping in dissecting some of key features in the metastatic cascade. Yet, tools for systematically analyze the contribution of blood flow, vascular permeability, inflammation, tissue architecture, and biochemical stimuli are missing. In this work, a microfluidic chip is designed and tested to replicate in vitro key steps in the metastatic cascade. It comprises two channels, resting on the same plane, connected via an array of rounded pillars to form a permeable micro-membrane. One channel acts as a vascular compartment and is coated by a fully confluent monolayer of endothelial cells, whereas the other channel is filled with a mixture of matrigel and breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) and reproduces the malignant tissue. The vascular permeability can be finely modulated by inducing pro-inflammatory conditions in the tissue compartment, which transiently opens up the tight junctions of endothelial cells. Permeability ranges from 1 m/sec (tight endothelium) to 5 m/sec (TNF- at 50 ng/mL overnight) and up to 10 m/sec (no endothelium). Fresh medium flowing continuously in the vascular compartment is sufficient to induce cancer cell intravasation at rates of 8 cells/day with an average velocity of 0.5 m/min. On the other hand, the vascular adhesion and extravasation of circulating cancer cells require TNF- stimulation. Extravasation occurs at lower rates with 4 cells/day and an average velocity of 0.1 m/min. Finally, the same chip is completely filled with matrigel and the migration of cancer cells from one channel to the other is monitored over a region of about 400 m. Invasion rates of 12 cells/day are documented upon TNF- stimulation. This work demonstrates that the proposed compartmentalized microfluidic chip can efficiently replicate in vitro, under controlled biophysical and biochemical conditions, the multiple key steps in the cancer metastatic cascade.
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