Turning weakness into strength: Albumin nanoparticle-redirected amphotericin B biodistribution for reducing nephrotoxicity and enhancing antifungal activity.

2020
Abstract As the gold standard treatment for invasive fungal infection, amphotericin B (AmB) is limited by its severe nephrotoxicity. It has been shown that AmB complex with albumin in vivo forms a sub-10 nm nanocomplex within kidney excretion size range and eventually induces the nephrotoxicity. This study presents an approach to take advantage of the “weakness” of such unique interaction between AmB and albumin to form AmB nanocomplex beyond the size range of kidney excretion. Herein, a novel strategy was developed by directly assembling molecular BSA into larger-sized nanostructures with the reconstructed intermolecular disulfide bond and hydrophobic interaction. The rich binding sites of AmB within BSA nanostructures enabled the efficient AmB loading and forming nanoparticle (AmB-NP) which exceeds the size range of kidney excretion (~ 60 nm). We found nanoassembly with BSA redirected biodistribution of AmB with a 2.8-fold reduction of drug accumulation in the kidney and significantly improved its renal impairment in mice. Furthermore, we found that nanoassembly with BSA significantly increased the biodistribution of AmB in brain and endowed it 100-folds increase in pharmacological effect against meningoencephalitis caused by common fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. Together, this study not merely overcomes the nephrotoxicity of AmB using its “weakness” by a nanoassembly method, and provides a new strategy for reducing toxicity of drugs with high albumin binding rate in vivo.
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