posted on 2013-11-04, 00:00authored byRohun
U. Palekar, Jacob W. Myerson, Paul H. Schlesinger, J. Evan Sadler, Hua Pan, Samuel A. Wickline
The
goal of the present work was to design and test an acute-use
nanoparticle-based antithrombotic agent that exhibits sustained local
inhibition of thrombin without requiring a systemic anticoagulant
effect to function against acute arterial thrombosis. To demonstrate
proof of concept, we functionalized the surface of liposomes with
multiple copies of the direct thrombin inhibitor, d-phenylalanyl-l-prolyl-l-arginyl-chloromethyl ketone (PPACK), which
exhibits high affinity for thrombin as a free agent but manifests
too rapid clearance in vivo to be effective alone.
The PPACK-liposomes were formulated as single unilamellar vesicles,
with a diameter of 170.78 ± 10.59 nm and a near neutral charge. In vitro models confirmed the inhibitory activity of PPACK-liposomes,
demonstrating a KI′ of 172.6 nM. In experimental clots in vitro, treatment
of formed clots completely abrogated any further clotting upon exposure
to human plasma. The liposomes were evaluated in vivo in a model of photochemical-induced carotid artery injury, resulting
in significantly prolonged arterial occlusion time over that of controls
(69.06 ± 5.65 min for saline treatment, N =
6, 71.33 ± 9.46 min for free PPACK treated; N = 4, 85.75 ± 18.24 min for precursor liposomes; N = 4, 139.75 ± 20.46 min for PPACK-liposomes; P = 0.0049, N = 6). Systemic anticoagulant profiles
revealed a rapid return to control levels within 50 min, while still
maintaining antithrombin activity at the injury site. The establishment
of a potent and long-acting anticoagulant surface over a newly forming
clot with the use of thrombin targeted nanoparticles that do not require
systemic anticoagulation to be effective offers an alternative site-targeted
approach to the management of acute thrombosis.