In occlusive vascular diseases, dissolution of thrombus and rapid restoration of blood flow is critical in preventing tissue morbidity and mortality. To this end, current clinicl `clot-busting' strategies using intravascular systemic administration of thrombolytic drugs like tPA present issues of plasma-induced drug deactivation, short plasma half-life of drugs, rapid drug washout, reduced drug availability at target site, and systemic hemorrhagic side effects. These issues can be potentially resolved by controlled release of the drugs from injectable delivery vehicles that can selectively accumulate at the clot site under hemodynamic flow. For this, it is necessary for the vehicles to (i) actively bind to the clot site, (ii) stay retained uner flow, and (iii) allow localized drug release for site-selective action. For designing such a vehicl, natural platelets provide an excellent paradigm, since platelets have the innate capability to marginate towards the vascular wall, bind actively to clot via specific ligand-receptor interactions, and release cytoplasmic contents to modulate clot activities. The margination of platelets towards the vascular wall is facilitated by their discoid shape, ~2 diameter size and ~25-50 kPa modulus, while their active binding at the thrombus site is mediated via ligands fibrinogen (Fg) and PSGL-1 binding to platelet surface integrin GPIIb-IIIa and P-selectin respectively. Inspired by these physico-mechanical and biointeractive cues of natural platelets, we propose to engineer vehicles that will have (i) platelet-mimetic shape, size and modulus to facilitate enhanced margination towards the vascular wall, and (ii) heteromultivalent surface-decoration with GPIIb-IIIa- and P-selectin-binding peptide ligands to enable thrombus-selective anchorage and retention under hemodynamic flow. Our central hypothesis is that controlled release of thrombolytic drugs from such platelet-inspired vehicles anchoring at the thrombus site will enhance the site-specific therapeutic efficacy, while minimizing systemic drug distribution and side-effects. To test this, we will fabricate albumin-based platelet-inspired discoid flexible vehicles, modify their surface heteromultivalently with the active platelet-targeting ligands and evaluate their thrombus anchoring capability in vitro and in vivo (Aim1). In parallel, we will cationically modify tPA (mtPA) to facilitate its loading into the albumin particles since albumin i negatively charged at physiological pH, and characterize the loading and release of mtPA from these particles in vitro (Aim 2). After optimizing the platelet-inspired thrombus- anchoring mechanisms and the mtPA loading/release kinetics via these two synergistic yet independent aims, we will integrate them to create mtPA-loaded platelet-inspired vehicles which will be evaluated for targeted thrombolysis efficacy in vitro and in vivo (Aim 3). Our principal innovation is the design of a delivery vehicle that combines key physico-mechanical and biointeractive parameters inspired by platelets for enhanced thrombus-anchoring ability. The current application will test this technology for targeted thrombolytic therapy. The technology also holds the promise to become a platform for other targeted therapies in vascular diseases.

Public Health Relevance

In the clinic, direct systemic delivery of thrombolytic drugs is extensively used for `clot busting' therapy in various vascular diseases like stroke and heart attack. This strategy often results in reduced drug availability and action specifically at the clo site, while causing systemic non-specific drug action leading to severe hemorrhagic side effects. Hence we propose to investigate an innovative strategy of targeted thrombolytic therapy strategy where the drug will be packaged within platelet-inspired particulate vehicles that can specifically anchor onto clot sites and allow localized release of the drug for therapeutic action selectively at the clot site, thereby making the therapy potentially more efficient and safe compared systemic thrombolysis.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL129179-04
Application #
9477092
Study Section
Biomaterials and Biointerfaces Study Section (BMBI)
Program Officer
Ochocinska, Margaret J
Project Start
2015-09-01
Project End
2019-04-30
Budget Start
2018-05-01
Budget End
2019-04-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Case Western Reserve University
Department
Biomedical Engineering
Type
Biomed Engr/Col Engr/Engr Sta
DUNS #
077758407
City
Cleveland
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
44106
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