Complement activation in vitro and reactogenicity of low-molecular weight dextran-coated SPIONs in the pig CARPA model: Correlation with physicochemical features and clinical information

Publication date

2018-01-28

Authors

Fülöp, Tamás
Nemes, RekaISNI 0000000507285392
Mészáros, Tamás
Urbanics, Rudolf
Kok, Robbert JanORCID 0000-0003-4933-3968ISNI 0000000392754805
Jackman, Joshua A.
Storm, GerritISNI 0000000042534976
Szebeni, János

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The unique magnetic properties of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) have led to their increasing use in drug delivery and imaging applications. Some polymer-coated SPIONs, however, share with many other nanoparticles the potential of causing hypersensitivity reactions known as complement (C) activation-related pseudoallergy (CARPA). In order to explore the roles of iron core composition and particle surface coating in SPION-induced CARPA, we measured C activation by 6 different SPIONs in a human serum that is known to react to nanoparticles (NPs) with strong C activation. Remarkably, only the carboxymethyldextran-coated (ferucarbotran, Resosvist®) and dextran-coated (ferumoxtran-10, Sinerem®) SPIONs caused significant C activation, while the citric acid, phosphatidylcholine, starch and chitosan-coated SPIONs had no such effect. Focusing on Resovist and Sinerem, we found Sinerem to be a stronger activator of C than Resovist, although the individual variation in 15 different human sera was substantial. Further analysis of C activation by Sinerem indicated biphasic dose dependence and significant production of C split product Bb but not C4d, attesting to alternative pathway C activation only at low doses. Consistent with the strong C activation by Sinerem and previous reports of HSRs in man, injection of Sinerem in a pig led to dose-dependent CARPA, while Resovist was reaction-free. Using nanoparticle tracking analysis, it was further determined that Sinerem, but not Resovist, displayed multimodal size distribution and significant fraction of aggregates – factors which are known to promote C activation and CARPA. Taken together, our findings offer physicochemical insight into how key compositional factors and nanoparticle size distribution affect SPION-induced CARPA, a knowledge that could lead to the development of SPIONs with improved safety profiles.

Keywords

Anaphylatoxins, Anaphylaxis, CARPA, Complement, Hypersensitivity reactions, Imaging, Immune toxicity, Iron, MRI, Nanomedicines, Nanoparticles, Taverne, Pharmaceutical Science, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Fülöp, T, Nemes, R, Mészáros, T, Urbanics, R, Kok, R J, Jackman, J A, Storm, G & Szebeni, J 2018, 'Complement activation in vitro and reactogenicity of low-molecular weight dextran-coated SPIONs in the pig CARPA model : Correlation with physicochemical features and clinical information', Journal of Controlled Release, vol. 270, pp. 268-274. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2017.11.043