A neutrophil cell membrane-biomimetic nanoplatform based on l-arginine nanoparticles for early osteoarthritis diagnosis and nitric oxide therapy†
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common debilitating disease affecting articular joints for which no effective disease-modifying early diagnosis or medical therapy tools are currently available. The inefficient delivery of drugs into inflamed chondrocytes has restricted the development of anti-OA medication. Evidence has shown that inflammatory neutrophils possess the property of targeting inflammation via inflammatory tissue recruiting. Herein, we report neutrophil-cell-membrane-based biomimetic nanoparticles (NM-LANPs@Ru) as an OA theranostic nanoplatform; they act as a NO delivery system, coating neutrophil cell membrane onto the surface of self-assembled PEGylated L-arginine nanoparticles (LANPs) to act as a NO donor and loading a Ru complex to act as a ROS inducer. NM-LANPs@Ru demonstrated the specific targeting of inflamed OA with low toxicity, good NO release, and excellent fluorescence/photoacoustic (FL/PA) imaging properties. We showed that NM-LANPs@Ru exhibited enhanced cellular association in inflamed chondrocyte cells (C28/I2), much higher than NO release from ROS oxidized LA, and it improved the inhibition of the apoptosis of inflamed C28/I2 cells compared with control treatments. In vivo studies demonstrated that NM-LANPs@Ru effectively targeted inflamed OA, based on real-time dual-modal FL/PA imaging, eventually exhibiting its excellent anti-inflammatory activity. Our study may provide a new approach for the early diagnosis and treatment of osteoarthritis using a neutrophil-cell-membrane-based biomimetic nanoplatform for NO or drug delivery.