Enhanced Chemoradiotherapy for MRSA-Infected Osteomyelitis Using Immunomodulatory Polymer-Reinforced Nanotherapeutics
By
Zhang, YF (Zhang, Yufei) [1] ; Cheng, YJ (Cheng, Yijie) [1] ; Zhao, Z (Zhao, Zhe) [2] ; Jiang, SP (Jiang, Shengpeng) [3] ; Zhang, YH (Zhang, Yuhan) [3] ; Li, J (Li, Jie) [1] ; Huang, SY (Huang, Siyuan) [1] ; Wang, WB (Wang, Wenbo) [1] ; Xue, Y (Xue, Yun) [1] ; Li, AR (Li, Anran) [1] ; Tao, Z (Tao, Zhen) [3] , [4] ; Wu, ZM (Wu, Zhongming) [5] ; Zhang, XE (Zhang, Xinge) [1]
Early Access
MAR 2024
Indexed
2024-03-21
Document Type
Article; Early Access
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Abstract
The eradication of osteomyelitis caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) poses a significant challenge due to its development of biofilm-induced antibiotic resistance and impaired innate immunity, which often leads to frequent surgical failure. Here, the design, synthesis, and performance of X-ray-activated polymer-reinforced nanotherapeutics that modulate the immunological properties of infectious microenvironments to enhance chemoradiotherapy against multidrug-resistant bacterial deep-tissue infections are reported. Upon X-ray radiation, the proposed polymer-reinforced nanotherapeutic generates reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species. To robustly eradicate MRSA biofilms at deep infection sites, these species can specifically bind to MRSA and penetrate biofilms for enhanced chemoradiotherapy treatment. X-ray-activated nanotherapeutics modulate the innate immunity of macrophages to prevent the recurrence of osteomyelitis. The remarkable anti-infection effects of these nanotherapeutics are validated using a rat osteomyelitis model. This study demonstrates the significant potential of a synergistic chemoradiotherapy and immunotherapy method for treating MRSA biofilm-infected osteomyelitis.
A novel nanoradiosensitizer with improved light penetration depth for enhanced chemoradiotherapy effect to reverse immunosuppression in the biofilm-caused poorly innate immunity area and to eliminate MRSA-infected deep-tissue infections. The polymer-reinforced nanotherapeutics in the rat osteomyelitis model verify that chemoradiotherapy expresses an excellent modality for deep-tissue infection management and a promising immunomodulatory treatment to enhance the therapeutic effects of bacterial infections. i