Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Immunol. 2020 Aug 4;11:1726. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01726. eCollection 2020.
Inflammation is an essential component of a wide variety of disease processes and oftentimes can increase the deleterious effects of a disease. Finding ways to modulate this essential immune process is the basis for many therapeutics under development and is a burgeoning area of research for both basic and translational immunology. In addition to developing therapeutics for cellular and molecular targets, the use of biomaterials to modify innate and adaptive immune responses is an area that has recently sparked significant interest. In particular, immunomodulatory activity can be engineered into biomaterials to elicit heightened or dampened immune responses for use in vaccines, immune tolerance, or anti-inflammatory applications. Importantly, the inherent physicochemical properties of the biomaterials play a significant role in determining the observed effects. Properties including composition, molecular weight, size, surface charge, and others affect interactions with immune cells (i.e., nano-bio interactions) and allow for differential biological responses such as activation or inhibition of inflammatory signaling pathways, surface molecule expression, and antigen presentation to be encoded. Numerous opportunities to open new avenues of research to understand the ways in which immune cells interact with and integrate information from their environment may provide critical solutions needed to treat a variety of disorders and diseases where immune dysregulation is a key inciting event. However, to elicit predictable immune responses there is a great need for a thorough understanding of how the biomaterial properties can be tuned to harness a designed immunological outcome. This review aims to systematically describe the biological effects of nanoparticle properties-separate from additional small molecule or biologic delivery-on modulating innate immune cell responses in the context of severe inflammation and sepsis. We propose that nanoparticles represent a potential polypharmacological strategy to simultaneously modify multiple aspects of dysregulated immune responses where single target therapies have fallen short for these applications. This review intends to serve as a resource for immunology labs and other associated fields that would like to apply the growing field of rationally designed biomaterials into their work.
炎症是多种疾病过程的重要组成部分,并且常常会增加疾病的有害影响。寻找调节这种基本免疫过程的方法是许多正在开发的治疗方法的基础,也是基础和转化免疫学研究的一个新兴领域。除了开发针对细胞和分子靶标的治疗方法外,利用生物材料来修饰固有和适应性免疫反应是一个最近引起极大兴趣的领域。特别是,可以将免疫调节活性设计到生物材料中,以引起增强或减弱的免疫反应,用于疫苗、免疫耐受或抗炎应用。重要的是,生物材料的固有物理化学性质在确定观察到的效果方面起着重要作用。包括组成、分子量、大小、表面电荷等特性会影响与免疫细胞的相互作用(即纳米生物相互作用),并允许编码不同的生物学反应,例如炎症信号通路的激活或抑制、表面分子表达和抗原呈递。有许多机会为理解免疫细胞与环境相互作用并整合环境信息的方式开辟新的研究途径,这可能为治疗各种免疫失调是关键引发事件的疾病提供关键解决方案。然而,为了引起可预测的免疫反应,非常需要彻底了解如何调整生物材料特性以利用设计的免疫学结果。这篇综述旨在系统地描述纳米颗粒特性(与额外的小分子或生物递药分开)在严重炎症和败血症背景下调节固有免疫细胞反应的生物学效应。我们提出,纳米颗粒代表了一种潜在的多药理学策略,可同时调节这些应用中单一靶标治疗方法失败的失调免疫反应的多个方面。这篇综述旨在为免疫学实验室和其他相关领域提供资源,这些实验室和领域希望将不断发展的合理设计生物材料领域应用于他们的工作中。