Towards a nanoparticle-based prophylactic for maternal autoantibody-related autism

Publication date: Available online 23 July 2019Source: Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and MedicineAuthor(s): B.S Amir Bolandparvaz, B.S Rian Harriman, Kenneth Alvarez, Kristina Lilova, Zexi Zang, B.S. Andy Lam, Elizabeth Edmiston, Alexandra Navrotsky, Natalia Vapniarsky-Arzi, Judy Van De Water, Jamal S. LewisAbstractRecently, the causative agents of Maternal Autoantibody-Related (MAR) autism, pathological autoantibodies and their epitopic targets (e.g. lactate dehydrogenase B [LDH B] peptide), have been identified. Herein, we report on the development of Systems for Nanoparticle-based Autoantibody Reception and Entrapment (SNAREs), which we hypothesized could scavenge disease-propagating MAR autoantibodies from the maternal blood. To demonstrate this functionality, we synthesized 15 nm dextran iron oxide nanoparticles surface-modified with citric acid, methoxy PEG(10 kDa) amine, and LDH B peptide (33.8 μg peptide/cm2). In vitro, we demonstrated significantly lower macrophage uptake for SNAREs compared to control NPs. The hallmark result of this study was the efficacy of the SNAREs to remove 90% of LDH B autoantibody from prenatal, patient-derived serum. Further, in vitro cytotoxicity testing and a maximal tolerated dose study in mice demonstrated the safety of the SNARE formulation. This work establishes the feasibility of SNAREs as the first-ever prophylactic against MAR autism.Graphical AbstractNanoparticle prophylactic against MAR Autism: (A) Autoant...
Source: Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine - Category: Nanotechnology Source Type: research