Drug Delivery
Jillian Collins, MS (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate
Colorado School of Mines
golden, Colorado, United States
Nikki Farnsworth, PhD
Assistant Professor
Colorado School of Mines, United States
Holger Russ, PhD
Professor
University of Florida, United States
Andres Ocampo
Undergraduate Student
Colorado School of Mines, United States
Keifer Holcomb, BS
Student
Colorado School of Mines, United States
Ali Shilleh, PhD
Post Doctoral Student
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, United States
In type 1 diabetes (T1D), autoreactive immune cells destroy insulin secreting β-cells in pancreatic islets. Islet transplantation shows promise in restoring glucose homeostasis without exogenous insulin; however, long-term graft survival remains a critical barrier to the success of this treatment. Therapies aimed to protect or proliferate endogenous β-cells have off target affects and require targeted delivery to improve efficacy. We have developed a nanocapsule (NC) delivery system to specifically target and deliver cargo to human β-cells. We hypothesize NCs will selectively be taken up by human β-cells and deliver therapeutic cargo.
NCs were synthesized with a water in oil emulsion evaporation technique. NCs were coated via ionic interactions with ectonucleoside triphosphate 3 (ENTPD3) antibody, a human β-cell specific marker or Exendin-4 conjugated to hyaluronic acid (HA-Ex4). NC size, size distribution, charge, stability and drug release profiles were determined. NCs loaded with pentamidine (PTM) or Cy5 were cultured for 24-168h with human iPSC-derived β-cells (sBC), human islets, or injected into the tail vein of non-obese diabetic immunodeficient (NOD-SCID) mice. Confocal microscopy confirmed delivery of cargo to β-cells and pancreatic islets, viability, and cytotoxicity.
NCs were 271 ± 7nm in size with excellent size homogeneity (polydispersity index 0.06 ± 0.03, n=3) and can have HA coating the outside of the NCs confirmed by zeta potential (3mV vs -35mV, n=3). NCs displayed a sustained release of cargo for >45 days (n=5). SEM images support NCs can be freeze-dried and reconstituted with a cryoprotectant without a significant change in NC size (n=3). In vitro, we observed no cytotoxicity of NCs up to 168h and a significant increase in β-cell death with PTM loaded ENTPD3 coated NCs compared to controls at 24 (p< 0.001, n=4) and 72h (p< 0.01, n=4). Human islets display similar trends as the sBCs. sBCs treated with PTM loaded ENTPD3 coated NCs had more insulin+ dead cells (88 ± 4%) than controls (p< 0.01, n=4). ENTPD3 or HA-Ex4 NCs were internalized into sBCs in vitro and pancreatic islets in vivo respectively. Our data shows long term stability and in vivo targeting of NCs to β-cells and supports use of our NCs for targeted delivery of therapeutics to human β-cells to treat T1D.