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  • Article
    Liu L, He H, Zhang M, Zhang S, Zhang W, Liu J.
    Biomaterials. 2014 Sep;35(27):8002-14.
    The primary aim of our current study was to utilize hyaluronic acid (HA) to decorate reconstituted high density lipoprotein (rHDL) loaded with lovastatin (LT), termed as HA-LT-rHDL, in order to investigate whether coating HA could efficiently evade from the undesired uptake of LT-rHDL in liver mediated by scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) and then greatly accumulate LT-rHDL in atherosclerotic lesions via strong HA affinity to CD44 up-regulated at inflammatory sites such as atherosclerotic lesions, thus exerting enhanced atheroprotective efficacy. In vitro characterizations indicated the successful HA decoration onto the surface of LT-rHDL, which could be indirectly verified by the increased particle size, enhanced negative surface charge and reduced in vitro drug release rate after HA decoration. Compared with rHDL without HA, HA decoration endowed rHDL with better atherosclerotic lesions targeting efficiency and lower liver accumulation, proved by results from ex vivo imaging and tissue distribution. Furthermore, atheroprotective efficacy in model animal showed that HA-LT-rHDL had the best potent efficacy than other LT preparations, which was demonstrated by the fewest atherosclerotic lesions sizes, the most minimum mean intima-media thickness (MIT), the lowest macrophage infiltration and expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), respectively. Above results demonstrated that the newly designed HA-LT-rHDL could decrease the non-targeted uptake by liver and deliver a large amount of drug into atherosclerotic lesions so as to efficiently suppress the advancement of atherosclerosis.
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