Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Nov 2022)

Protein corona mediated liposomal drug delivery for bacterial infection management

  • Qianwen Shao,
  • Tianhao Ding,
  • Feng Pan,
  • Guanghui Li,
  • Shun Shen,
  • Jun Qian,
  • Changyou Zhan,
  • Xiaoli Wei

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
pp. 855 – 866

Abstract

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Liposomes have been widely investigated as a class of promising antibiotic delivery systems for the treatment of life-threatening bacterial infections. However, the inevitable formation of protein corona on the liposomal surface can heavily impact in vivo performance. A better understanding of the effects of protein corona on liposomal behavior can significantly improve antibacterial liposomal drug development. Here, the critical role of protein corona in mediating liposome-bacteria interactions was elucidated. Adsorption of negatively charged protein on cationic liposome weakened electrostatic attraction-enhanced liposomal binding to the bacteria. Cumulative complement deposition on anionic liposome composed of phosphatidylglycerol (DSPG sLip) contributed to a superior binding affinity of DSPG sLip to planktonic bacteria and biofilms, which was exploited to enhance bacteria-targeted drug delivery. In both S. aureus-related osteomyelitis and pneumonia mice models, DSPG sLip was demonstrated as a promising antibiotic nanocarrier for managing MRSA infection, indicating the benefits of lipid composition-based protein corona modulation in liposomal antibiotic delivery for bacterial infection treatment.

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