Artificial Spores: Immunoprotective Nanocoating of Red Blood Cells with Supramolecular Ferric Ion-Tannic Acid Complex

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The blood-type-mismatch problem, in addition to shortage of blood donation, in blood transfusion has prompted the researchers to develop universal blood that does not require blood typing. In this work, the "cell-in-shell" (i.e., artificial spore) approach is utilized to shield the immune-provoking epitopes on the surface of red blood cells (RBCs). Individual RBCs are successfully coated with supramolecular metal-organic coordination complex of ferric ion (Fe-III) and tannic acid (TA). The use of isotonic saline (0.85% NaCl) is found to be critical in the formation of stable, reasonably thick (20 nm) shells on RBCs without any aggregation and hemolysis. The formed "RBC-in-shell" structures maintain their original shapes, and effectively attenuate the antibody-mediated agglutination. Moreover, the oxygen-carrying capability of RBCs is not deteriorated after shell formation. This work suggests a simple but fast method for generating immune-camouflaged RBCs, which would contribute to the development of universal blood.
Publisher
MDPI AG
Issue Date
2017-04
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

INDIVIDUAL MAMMALIAN-CELLS; LIVING CELLS; YEAST-CELLS; ENCAPSULATION; SILICA; TRANSFUSION; NANOSHELL; CAPSULES

Citation

POLYMERS, v.9, no.4

ISSN
2073-4360
DOI
10.3390/polym9040140
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/224110
Appears in Collection
CH-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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