posted on 2025-03-13, 14:08authored byFrancisca
L. Gomes, Dorothee Wasserberg, Rick Edelbroek, Jasper van Weerd, Pascal Jonkheijm, Jeroen Leijten
Particles are essential building blocks in nanomedicine
and cell
engineering. Their administration often involves blood contact, which
demands a hemocompatible material profile. Coating particles with
isolated cell membranes is a common strategy to improve hemocompatibility,
but this solution is nonscalable and potentially immunogenic. Cell
membrane-like lipid coatings are a promising alternative, as lipids
can be synthesized on a large scale and used to create safe cell membrane-like
supported bilayers. However, a method to controllably and scalably
lipid-coat a wide range of particles has remained elusive. Here, an
on-particle solvent-assisted lipid coating (OPSALC) method is introduced
as an innovative technique to endow various types of particles with
cell membrane-like coatings. Coating formation efficiency is shown
to depend on lipid concentration, buffer addition rate, and solvent:buffer
ratio, as these parameters determine lipid assembly and lipid–surface
interactions. Four lipid formulations with various levels of erythrocyte
membrane mimicry are explored in terms of hemocompatibility, demonstrating
a reduced particle-induced hemolysis and plasma coagulation time.
Interestingly, formulations with higher mimicry levels show the lowest
levels of complement activation and highest colloidal stability. Overall,
OPSALC represents a simple yet scalable strategy to endow particles
with cell membrane-like lipid coatings to facilitate blood-contact
applications.