Pulmonary surfactant inhibition of nanoparticle uptake by alveolar epithelial cells

Milad Radiom(Université Paris Cité), Matthieu Sarkis(Université Paris Cité), Oliver Brookes(Université Paris Cité), Evdokia K. Oikonomou(Université Paris Cité), Armelle Baeza‐Squiban(Université Paris Cité), Jean‐François Berret(Université Paris Cité)
arXiv (Cornell University)
October 20, 2020
Cited by 70Open Access
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Abstract

Pulmonary surfactant forms a sub-micrometer thick fluid layer that covers the surface of alveolar lumen and inhaled nanoparticles therefore come in to contact with surfactant prior to any interaction with epithelial cells. We investigate the role of the surfactant as a protective physical barrier by modeling the interactions using silica-Curosurf-alveolar epithelial cell system in vitro. Electron microscopy displays that the vesicles are preserved in the presence of nanoparticles while nanoparticle-lipid interaction leads to the formation of mixed aggregates. Fluorescence microscopy reveals that the surfactant decreases the uptake of nanoparticles by up to two orders of magnitude in two models of alveolar epithelial cells, A549 and NCI-H441, irrespective of immersed culture on glass or air-liquid interface culture on transwell. Confocal microscopy corroborates the results by showing nanoparticle-lipid colocalization interacting with the cells. Our work thus supports the idea that pulmonary surfactant plays a protective role against inhaled nanoparticles. The effect of surfactant should therefore be considered in predictive assessment of nanoparticle toxicity or drug nanocarrier uptake. Models based on the one presented in this work may be used for preclinical tests with engineered nanoparticles.


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