Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Precision targeting of FDX1-mediated cuproptosis by a ROS-responsive hydrogel for myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury treatment.
- Journal:
- Theranostics
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Hu, Jiayi et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Cardiology · China
Abstract
Myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury (MIRI) poses a critical clinical challenge due to intertwined oxidative stress and cuproptosis-driven cell death. Current therapies inadequately address dual-pathology mechanisms (ROS overproduction and copper dysregulation), while conventional drug delivery lacks spatiotemporal precision.A ROS-responsive hydrogel (OD@G4CAsi-FDX1) was engineered via dynamic Schiff base crosslinking between oxidized dextran (OD) and polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM G4). The hydrogel co-encapsulates antioxidant caffeic acid (CA) and FDX1-targeted siRNA (si-FDX1).biocompatibility, ROS scavenging, and mitochondrial protection were assessed in primary cardiomyocytes.efficacy was evaluated in a murine MIRI model following intramyocardial hydrogel injection. Cardiac function, infarct size, and molecular markers were analyzed., it reduced ROS, preserved mitochondrial membrane potential, and suppressed pro-inflammatory cytokines., it reduced infarct size, suppressed cuproptosis markers, and improved cardiac function. Mechanistically, si-FDX1 blocked DLAT oligomerization, while CA neutralized ROS, synergistically restoring redox homeostasis. This efficacy was enabled by sustained ROS-triggered release.OD@G4CAsi-FDX1 hydrogel dual-targets ROS and cuproptosis via a single injectable platform, overcoming limitations of conventional mono-mechanistic therapies. It demonstrates significant cardioprotection and clinical potential for MIRI management.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41355968/