Delivery of a model lipophilic membrane cargo to bone marrow via cell-derived microparticles.

Journal of Controlled Release : Official Journal of the Controlled Release Society
Chunyan YangDmitri Simberg

Abstract

Bone marrow (BM) is the central immunological organ and the origin of hematological diseases. Efficient and specific drug delivery to the BM is an unmet need. We tested delivery of fluorescent indocarbocyanine lipids (ICLs, DiR, DiD, DiI) as a model lipophilic cargo, via different carriers. Systemically injected T-lymphocyte cell line Jurkat delivered ICLs to the BM more efficiently than erythrocytes, and more selectively than PEGylated liposomes. Near infrared imaging showed that the delivery was restricted to the BM, lungs, liver and spleen, with no accumulation in the kidneys, brain, heart, intestines, fat tissue and pancreas. Following systemic injection of ICL-labeled cells in immunodeficient or immunocompetent mice, few cells arrived in the BM intact. However, between 5 and 10% of BM cells were ICL-positive. Confocal microscopy of intact BM confirmed that ICLs are delivered independently of the injected cells. Flow cytometry analysis showed that the lipid accumulated in both CD11b + and CD11b- cells, and in hematopoietic progenitors. In a xenograft model of acute myeloid leukemia, a single injection of 10 million Jurkat cells delivered DiD to ~15% of the tumor cells. ICL-labeled cells disappeared from blood almost immedia...Continue Reading

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