Hemoglobin
(Hb)-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) are being developed
as artificial red blood cell (RBC) substitutes for use in transfusion
medicine. Unfortunately, prior generations of HBOCs were not able
to successfully minimize key side effects, including vasoconstriction,
systemic hypertension, and oxidative tissue injury, which is primarily
due to the extravasation of cell-free Hb from the vascular space into
the tissue space. Therefore, to potentially reduce these side effects,
we successfully encapsulated Hb within a zeolitic imidazolate framework
(ZIF-8) to form ZIF-8-Hb nanoparticles (ZIF-8P-Hb). Both ZIF-8 and
ZIF-8P-Hb nanoparticles were synthesized at a relatively high molar
ratio of 2-methylimidazole:zinc, which resulted in a monodisperse
nanoparticle size distribution. In addition, the flow conditions for
tangential flow filtration-facilitated purification of the nanoparticles
did not exert a strong effect on the nanoparticle size distribution.
ZIF-8P-Hb nanoparticles exhibited high stability, ultrahigh Hb encapsulation
efficiency, and a monodisperse size distribution. Additionally, ZIF-8P-Hb
nanoparticles exhibited a ζ-potential of −11.2 ±
0.9 mV, demonstrating its potentially enhanced biocompatibility in
comparison to bare ZIF-8 nanoparticles (40.7 ± 2.0 mV). More
significantly, ZIF-8P-Hb nanoparticles exhibited significantly enhanced
hydrothermal stability with negligible release of cell-free Hb. Furthermore,
ZIF-8P-Hb displayed a significantly lower haptoglobin binding rate
constant compared to cell-free Hb, indicating its potentially slower
in vivo clearance in comparison to cell-free Hb. Moreover, we observed
a relatively low level of hemolysis when ZIF-8P-Hb nanoparticles were
incubated with RBCs (<5%), which demonstrates a suitable safety
profile. To further optimize the ZIF-8P-Hb nanoparticle synthesis
protocol, various procedural parameters were systematically investigated
to evaluate their impact on the size distribution of ZIF-8 and ZIF-8P-Hb
nanoparticles. Taken together, this work provides a comprehensive
approach for synthesizing a monodisperse HBOC as a potential artificial
RBC substitute.