AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a severe lung condition with key features including fluid buildup in the lungs, inflammatory cell influx, and difficulty in oxygenation, largely driven by endothelial cell damage and inflammation.
  • Disulfiram (DSF), a medication typically used for alcohol abuse, has been discovered to inhibit a specific process in cell death (pyroptosis), making it a potential treatment option for inflammatory diseases like ARDS.
  • The researchers developed a nanoparticle delivery system (DTP-LET@DSF NPs) using liposomes to target lung cells, successfully demonstrating reduced toxicity and effective treatment in mice models by preventing cell death and cytokine storms associated with ARDS.

Article Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a serious respiratory condition characterized by a damaged pulmonary endothelial barrier that causes protein-rich lung edema, an influx of proinflammatory cells, and treatment-resistant hypoxemia. Damage to pulmonary endothelial cells and inflammation are pivotal in ARDS development with a key role played by endothelial cell pyroptosis. Disulfiram (DSF), a drug that has long been used to treat alcohol addiction, has recently been identified as a potent inhibitor of gasdermin D (GSDMD)-induced pore formation and can thus prevent pyroptosis and inflammatory cytokine release. These findings indicate that DSF is a promising treatment for inflammatory disorders. However, addressing the challenge posed by its intrinsic physicochemical properties, which hinder intravenous administration, and effective delivery to pulmonary vascular endothelial cells are crucial. Herein, we used biocompatible liposomes incorporating a lung endothelial cell-targeted peptide (CGSPGWVRC) to produce DSF-loaded nanoparticles (DTP-LET@DSF NPs) for targeted delivery and reactive oxygen species-responsive release facilitated by the inclusion of thioketal (TK) within the liposomal structure. After intravenous administration, DTP-LET@DSF NPs exhibited excellent cytocompatibility and minor systemic toxicity, effectively inhibited pyroptosis, mitigated lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced ARDS, and prevented cytokine storms resulting from excessive immune reactions in ARDS mice. This study presents a straightforward nanoplatform for ARDS treatment that potentially paves the way for the clinical use of this nanomedicine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c17659DOI Listing

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