Publication | Open Access
Chemical Modulation of <i>in Vivo</i> Macrophage Function with Subpopulation-Specific Fluorescent Prodrug Conjugates
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
Immunomodulatory agents represent one of the most promising strategies for enhancing tissue regeneration without the side effects of traditional drug-based therapies. Tissue repair depends largely on macrophages, making them ideal targets for proregenerative therapies. However, given the multiple roles of macrophages in tissue homeostasis, small molecule drugs must be only active in very specific subpopulations. In this work, we have developed the first prodrug-fluorophore conjugates able to discriminate closely related subpopulations of macrophages (i.e., proinflammatory M1 vs anti-inflammatory M2 macrophages), and employed them to deplete M1 macrophages <i>in vivo</i> without affecting other cell populations. Selective intracellular activation and drug release enabled simultaneous fluorescence cell tracking and ablation of M1 macrophages <i>in vivo</i>, with the concomitant rescue of a proregenerative phenotype. <i>Ex vivo</i> assays in human monocyte-derived macrophages validate the translational potential of this novel platform to develop chemical immunomodulatory agents as targeted therapies for immune-related diseases.
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