Abstract

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a complicated autoimmune disease that results in severe joint inflammation, synovial hyperplasia, pannus formation, cartilage and bone destruction, and other RA-associated complications. Although the pathogenesis of RA remains unclear, increasing reports have shown that inflammation-relevant cells and the microenvironment of inflamed joints play a critical role in the formation and aggravation of RA. Recently, numerous nanotherapeutics have been engineered to overcome these intractable challenges by readjusting inflammation-related seeds (endothelial cells, macrophages, neutrophils, antigen-presenting cells, fibroblasts, osteoclasts, T cells, B cells, and chondrocytes) and inflamed soils (NO, cell-free DNA, hypoxia, ROS, and pro-inflammatory cytokines). In this review, we first present a detailed pathogenesis of RA, with an emphasis on the emerging advances in regulating seeds or remodeling soils for RA treatment. We then outline these intelligent therapeutics via synergistic seed-soil adjustment, particularly for spatiotemporally cascade-responsive or all-in-one integrational nanosystems. Finally, we briefly discuss the ongoing challenges and prospects for the clinical development and translation of seed soil-based therapies.

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