Scientists have tried to develop
synthetic red blood cells that mimic the favorable properties of natural ones,
such as flexibility, oxygen transport and long circulation times. But so far,
most artificial red blood cells have had one or a few, but not all, key
features of the natural versions. Now, researchers reporting in ACS
Nano have made synthetic red blood cells that have all of the
cells’ natural abilities, plus a few new ones.
Red blood cells
(RBCs) take up oxygen from the lungs and deliver it to the body’s tissues.
These disk-shaped cells contain millions of molecules of hemoglobin — an
iron-containing protein that binds oxygen. RBCs are highly flexible, which
allows them to squeeze through tiny capillaries and then bounce back to their
former shape. The cells also contain proteins on their surface that allow them
to circulate through blood vessels for a long time without being gobbled up by
immune cells. Wei Zhu, C. Jeffrey Brinker and colleagues wanted to make
artificial RBCs that had similar properties to natural ones, but that could
also perform new jobs such as therapeutic drug delivery, magnetic targeting and
toxin detection.
The researchers
made the synthetic cells by first coating donated human RBCs with a thin layer
of silica. They layered positively and negatively charged polymers over the
silica-RBCs, and then etched away the silica, producing flexible replicas.
Finally, the team coated the surface of the replicas with natural RBC
membranes. The artificial cells were similar in size, shape, charge and surface
proteins to natural cells, and they could squeeze through model capillaries
without losing their shape. In mice, the synthetic RBCs lasted for more than 48
hours, with no observable toxicity. The researchers loaded the artificial cells
with either hemoglobin, an anticancer drug, a toxin sensor or magnetic
nanoparticles to demonstrate that they could carry cargoes. The team also
showed that the new RBCs could act as decoys for a bacterial toxin. Future
studies will explore the potential of the artificial cells in medical
applications, such as cancer therapy and toxin biosensing, the researchers say.
Journal article: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.9b08714
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