Bioactive Nanogels Mimicking the Antithrombogenic Nitric Oxide-Release Function of the Endothelium

Hosseinnejad A; Ludwig N; Mersmann S; Winnerbach P; Bleilevens C; Rossaint R; Rossaint J; Singh S

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) plays a significant role in controlling the physiology and pathophysiology of the body, including the endothelial antiplatelet function and therefore, antithrombogenic property of the blood vessels. This property of NO can be exploited to prevent thrombus formation on artificial surfaces like extracorporeal membrane oxygenators, which when come into contact with blood lead to protein adsorption and thereby platelet activation causing thrombus formation. However, NO is extremely reactive and has a very short biological half-life in blood, so only endogenous generation of NO from the blood contacting material can result into a stable and kinetically controllable local delivery of NO. In this regards, highly hydrophilic bioactive nanogels are presented which can endogenously generate NO in blood plasma from endogenous NO-donors thereby maintaining a physiological NO flux.~It is shown that NO releasing nanogels could initiate cGMP-dependent protein kinase signaling followed by phosphorylation of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein in platelets. This~prevents platelet activation and aggregation even in presence of highly potent platelet activators like thrombin, adenosine 5'-diphosphate, and U46619 (thromboxane A2 mimetic).

Details about the publication

JournalSmall
Volume19
Issue14
Page rangee2205185-e2205185
StatusPublished
Release year2023
DOI10.1002/smll.202205185
Keywordsantithrombogenic; cGMP-PKG signaling; nanogels; nitric oxide; platelets inhibition

Authors from the University of Münster

Rossaint, Jan Peter
Clinic for Anaesthesiology, Surgical Critical Care Medicine and Pain Therapy