Glycan-coated nanoparticles mimicking the ischemic glycocalyx scavenge the complement system conferring protection after experimental ischemic stroke

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Abstract

Glycoproteins lining the luminal endothelial surface form the glycocalyx, composing the tripartite blood brain barrier. We explored the glycocalyx as a source of danger signals for complement lectin pathway after ischemic stroke. Our data indicate that hypoxic microvascular cells increased α-D-mannosyl and N-acetylglucosaminyl exposure after re-oxygenation, favoring mannose binding lectin (MBL) pathogenic deposition, and overexpression of inflammatory genes ( ICAM-1 and MMP-2 ). The hypoxia-conditioned medium induced neuronal damage (reduced MAP-2), microglia and astrocytic reactivity (increased/thickened ramifications) when applied to induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons, astrocytes and microglia co-cultures. All these effects were counteracted by mannose-capped gold nanoparticles (Man-GNPs), shown to bind and sequester MBL from the medium. We then tested the Man-GNPs in vivo , in an ischemic stroke model using humanized mice, knocked-in for human MBL. The ischemic mice (males:females 1:1) treated with Man-GNPs (3h after the ischemic onset) exhibited less anxiety at the elevated plus maze and reduced neuronal loss at 8d after ischemia compared to vehicle-treated. Thus, multivalent Man-GNPs represent a promising approach to take MBL away from its glycoproteic targets on the ischemic endothelium, hence preventing downstream pathogenesis. Moreover, these data support circulating MBL as a druggable pharmacological target to prevent the thrombo-inflammatory events following acute brain injury.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
unpaywall
last seen: 2026-05-27T02:00:06.600101+00:00
License: CC-BY-4.0