J Extracell Vesicles. 2026 Apr;15(4):e70247. doi: 10.1002/jev2.70247.
ABSTRACT
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are non-replicating, lipid membrane-bound nanoparticles released by most eukaryotic cells into the extracellular space. When derived from platelets, a subset of EVs can exhibit remarkable anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, making them attractive candidates to attenuate sterile inflammatory states such as limb skeletal muscle ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Peripheral extremity IRI complicating acute limb revascularisation procedures, replantation of major traumatic amputations and limb allotransplants can trigger a life-threatening reperfusion syndrome that leads to multi-organ system failure and death. In this study, we used a platelet-derived EVs-enriched preparation as a therapeutic strategy for extremity IRI. To allow for a clinically translatable drug delivery strategy, we established and validated a catheter-directed regional intra-arterial limb infusion (RLI) delivery approach that permitted selective and effective targeting of pEVs to limb skeletal muscles and soft tissues in the vascularly isolated rodent extremity simulating pre-reperfusion preservation and revascularisation conditions of the ischaemic or amputated extremity. In addition to being safe and feasible, we demonstrated robust retention of EVs by skeletal muscles of the operative limb during the early critical phase of reperfusion injury following RLI. We also show that pretreatment of ischaemic skeletal muscles using an pEVs-enriched formulation just before reestablishing extremity blood flow alleviated metabolic derangements and suppressed the systemic and localised proinflammatory cytokine response associated with skeletal muscle reperfusion and reduced histologic markers of myofibre injury without adverse effects on serum chemistries. This work opens a new perspective to investigate novel approaches for regional delivery of therapeutic pEVs to skeletal muscle to mitigate limb IRI in vivo, and to achieve both in situ and ex vivo targeted delivery of nanocarriers to the isolated limb tissue for other therapeutic applications.
PMID:41995298 | DOI:10.1002/jev2.70247