Osteoarthritis therapies are limited to symptom management and joint replacement. AMPA/kainate glutamate receptor (GluR) antagonists (NBQX/DNQX, 2.5–20mM) alleviate symptoms and disease in rodent models of osteoarthritis. We hypothesised that poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA) nanoparticles and thermoresponsive hydrogels sustain GluR antagonist release to improve their efficacy in an humanised 3D bone model of inflammation. Drug release in PBS (37 °C) was measured by HPLC of samples taken from 2.5mM NBQX/DNQX loaded PLGA nanoparticles (double emulsion) and thermosetting hydrogels (homogenised Pluronic-F127 (22%/25% w/v) and Carbopol 934 (0.5% w/v) with 2.5mM NBQX/DNQX in dH2O)(n=3). Y201 MSCs were cultured in 3D in rat tail collagen type I gels and exposed to IL-6/sIL-6r (5/40ng/ml), free NBQX (200μM) or NBQX loaded PLGA nanoparticles for 24 and 72hrs. Bone turnover, inflammatory and glutamate signalling markers were quantified by immunoassay and RTqPCR. Data analysed using t-test/ANOVA with Tukeys and principal component analysis (PCA)(SPSS).Abstract
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METHODS
The AMPA/kainate glutamate receptor (GluR) antagonist NBQX reduced bone destruction when injected intra-articularly, in rat antigen induced arthritis (AIA) and is similarly protective in rodent models of osteoarthritis. NBQX reduced bone turnover