Modulation of the lifespan of C. elegans by the controlled release of nitric oxide

CHEMICAL SCIENCE(2020)

Cited 5|Views17
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Abstract
The frontier of nitric oxide biology has gradually shifted from mechanism elucidation to biomanipulation,e.g.cell-proliferation promotion, cell-apoptosis induction, and lifespan modulation. This warrants biocompatible nitric oxide (NO) donating materials, whose NO release is not only controlled by a bioorthogonal trigger, but also self-calibrated allowing real-time monitoring and hence an onset/offset of the NO release. Additionally, the dose of NO release should be facilely adjusted in a large dynamic range; flux and the dose are critical to the biological outcome of NO treatment.Viaself-assembly of a PEGylated small-molecule NO donor, we developed novel NO-donating nanoparticles (PEG-NORM), which meet all the aforementioned criteria. We showcased that a low flux of NO induced cell proliferation, while a high flux induced cell oxidative stress and, ultimately, death. Notably, PEG-NORM was capable of efficiently modulating the lifespan of C. elegans. The average lifespan ofC. eleganscould be fine-tuned to be as short as 15.87 +/- 0.29 days with a high dose of NO, or as long as 21.13 +/- 0.41 days with a low dose of NO, compared to an average life-span of 18.87 +/- 0.46 days. Thus, PEG-NORM has broad potential in cell manipulation and life-span modulation and could drive the advancement of NO biology and medicine.
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Neuroprotective Effects
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