KPV and RAPA Self-Assembled into Carrier-Free Nanodrugs for Vascular Calcification Therapy.
Zhang. Li L; Li. Dongze D; Aierken. Yierpani Y; Zhang. Jie J; Liu. Zhenyu Z; Lin. Zipeng Z; Jiang. Longqi L; Li. Qingzhu Q; Wu. Ya Y; Liu. Yong Y
Key Findings
- KPV and rapamycin self‑assemble into stable, carrier‑free nanoparticles
- In mouse models the KPV‑rapamycin nanoparticles significantly reduced vascular calcification compared to separate treatments
- The therapeutic effect is linked to suppressed inflammation and activated autophagy pathways
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage you can’t make or use these nanodrugs yourself, but the work hints that pairing anti‑inflammatory peptides with rapamycin might someday help prevent vessel calcification. For now, focus on proven strategies like controlled rapamycin dosing and general anti‑inflammatory lifestyle measures while keeping an eye on future developments.
Summary
Scientists made tiny particles by mixing a small anti‑inflammatory peptide (KPV) with rapamycin, and in mice these particles lowered the hardening of blood vessels better than either ingredient alone. The benefit seems to come from cutting inflammation and boosting a cell‑clean‑up process called autophagy, but the method needs lab‑grade nanotech and isn’t ready for home use.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a leading cause of death globally, and vascular calcification (VC) is an important independent risk factor for predicting CVD. Currently, there are no established therapeutic strategies for the treatment of VC. Although recognized combination therapies of nanomedicines can provide effective strategies for disease treatment, the clinical application of nanomedicines is limited because of their complex preparation processes, low drug loading rates, and unpredictable safety risks. Thus, developing a simple, efficient, and safe nanodrug to simultaneously regulate inflammation and autophagy may be a promising strategy for treating VC. Herein, an anti-inflammatory peptide (lysine-proline-valine peptides, KPV) and the autophagy activator rapamycin (RAPA) are self-assembled to form new carrier-free spherical nanoparticles (NPs), which shows good stability and biosafety. In vivo and in vitro, KPV-RAPA NPs significantly inhibit VC in mice compared to the other treatment groups. Mechanistically, KPV-RAPA NPs inhibit inflammatory responses and activated autophagy. Therefore, this study indicates that the new carrier-free KPV-RAPA NPs have great potential as therapeutic agents for VC combination therapy, which can promote the development of nanodrugs for VC.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-09-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/adhm.202402320
34