posted on 2025-01-21, 13:49authored byMengmeng Long, Lintao Wang, Lina Kang, Dongfang Liu, Tingting Long, He Ding, Yifan Duan, Hongliang He, Biao Xu, Ning Gu
The blood flow, when restored clinically following a
myocardial
infarction (MI), disrupts the physiological and metabolic equilibrium
of the ischemic myocardial area, resulting in secondary damage termed
myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury (MIRI). Reactive oxygen species
(ROS) generation and inflammatory reactions stand as primary culprits
behind MIRI. Current strategies focusing on ROS-scavenging and anti-inflammatory
actions have limited remission of MIRI. Prussian blue nanozyme (PBNz)
exhibits multiple enzyme-like activities including catalase (CAT),
peroxidase (POD), and superoxide dismutase (SOD), which are beneficial
for ROS clearance and fighting inflammation. Herein, a formulation
of PBNz coated with polydextrose-sorbitol carboxymethyl ether (PBNz@PSC)
was developed to enhance its efficacy, biocompatibility, and safety
for the treatment of MIRI. PBNz@PSC not only showed enhanced SOD-like
activity due to its polysaccharide attributes but also could passively
target the damaged myocardium through the enhanced permeability and
retention (EPR) effect. Both in vitro and in vivo studies have validated
their excellent biocompatibility, safety, ROS-scavenging ability,
and capacity to drive macrophage polarization from M1 toward M2, thereby
diminishing the levels of IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α to combat
inflammation. Consequently, PBNz@PSC can reverse ischemia reperfusion-induced
myocardial injury, reduce coronary microvascular obstruction (MVO),
and improve myocardial remodeling and cardiac function. Moreover,
PBNz@PSC showed more pronounced therapeutic effects for MIRI than
a clinical drug, sulfotanshinone IIA sodium. Notably, our findings
revealed the possible mechanism of PBNz@PSC in treating MIRI, which
mediated AMPK activation. In conclusion, this study presents a pioneering
strategy for addressing MIRI, promising improved ischemia-reperfusion
outcomes.