Pharmaceutics (Aug 2024)

New Approaches for Basophil Activation Tests Employing Dendrimeric Antigen–Silica Nanoparticle Composites

  • Silvia Calvo-Serrano,
  • Esther Matamoros,
  • Jose Antonio Céspedes,
  • Rubén Fernández-Santamaría,
  • Violeta Gil-Ocaña,
  • Ezequiel Perez-Inestrosa,
  • Cecilia Frecha,
  • Maria I. Montañez,
  • Yolanda Vida,
  • Cristobalina Mayorga,
  • Maria J. Torres

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16081039
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
p. 1039

Abstract

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In vitro cell activation through specific IgE bound to high-affinity receptors on the basophil surface is a widely used strategy for the evaluation of IgE-mediated immediate hypersensitivity reactions to betalactams. Cellular activation requires drug conjugation to a protein to form a large enough structure displaying a certain distance between haptens to allow the cross-linking of two IgE antibodies bound to the basophil’s surface, triggering their degranulation. However, no information about the size and composition of these conjugates is available. Routine in vitro diagnosis using the basophil activation test uses free amoxicillin, which is assumed to conjugate to a carrier present in blood. To standardize the methodology, we propose the use of well-controlled and defined nanomaterials functionalized with amoxicilloyl. Silica nanoparticles decorated with PAMAM–dendrimer–amoxicilloyl conjugates (NpDeAXO) of different sizes and amoxicilloyl densities (50–300 µmol amoxicilloyl/gram nanoparticle) have been prepared and chemically characterized. Two methods of synthesis were performed to ensure reproducibility and stability. Their functional effect on basophils was measured using an in-house basophil activation test (BAT) that determines CD63+ or CD203chigh activation markers. It was observed that NpDeAXO nanocomposites are not only able to specifically activate basophils but also do so in a more effective way than free amoxicillin, pointing to a translational potential diagnosis.

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