Extracorporeal Blood Treatment Using Functional Magnetic Nanoclusters Mitigates Organ Dysfunction of Sepsis in Swine

Author:

Park Sung Jin1ORCID,Park Inwon2ORCID,Kim Suhyun1ORCID,Kim Min Kyu1ORCID,Kim Seonghye2ORCID,Jeong Hwain2ORCID,Kim Dongsung2ORCID,Cho Seung Woo1ORCID,Park Tae‐Eun1ORCID,Ni Aleksey3ORCID,Lim Hankwon3ORCID,Joo Jinmyoung14ORCID,Lee Jae Hyuk2ORCID,Kang Joo H.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) Ulsan 44919 Republic of Korea

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Seongnam‐si Gyeonggi‐do 44919 Republic of Korea

3. School of Energy and Chemical Engineering Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) Ulsan 44919 Republic of Korea

4. Center for Genomic Integrity Institute for Basic Science Ulsan 44919 Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractMitigating sepsis‐induced severe organ dysfunction with magnetic nanoparticles has shown remarkable advances in extracorporeal blood treatment. Nevertheless, treating large septic animals remains challenging due to insufficient magnetic separation at rapid blood flow rates (>6 L h−1) and limited incubation time in an extracorporeal circuit. Herein, superparamagnetic nanoclusters (SPNCs) coated with red blood cell (RBC) membranes are developed, which promptly capture and magnetically separate a wide range of pathogens at high blood flow rates in a swine sepsis model. The SPNCs exhibited an ultranarrow size distribution of clustered iron oxide nanocrystals and exceptionally high saturation magnetization (≈ 90 emu g−1) close to that of bulk magnetite. It is also revealed that CD47 on the RBCs allows the RBC‐SPNCs to remain at a consistent concentration in the blood by evading innate immunity. The uniform size distribution of the RBC‐SPNCs greatly enhances their effectiveness in eradicating various pathogenic materials in extracorporeal blood. The use of RBC‐SPNCs for extracorporeal treatment of swine infected with multidrug‐resistant E. coli is validated and found that severe bacteremic sepsis‐induced organ dysfunction is significantly mitigated after 12 h. The findings highlight the potential application of RBC‐SPNCs for extracorporeal therapy of severe sepsis in large animal models and potentially humans.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

POSCO TJ Park Foundation

Ministry of Health and Welfare

Ministry of Science and ICT, South Korea

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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