Abstract

As an oxygen-transporting protein, free hemoglobin (Hb) often suffers from the disadvantage of undesirable stability and short blood circulation, which severely impairs the potential clinical applications as the blood substitute. In this work, Hb was facilely encapsulated into a kind of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) (ZIF-8) inspired by the natural biomineralization process. The obtained ZIF-8 encapsulating Hb (ZIF-8@Hb) showed the small hydrodynamic size of 180.8 nm and neutral zeta potential of -2.1 mV by adjusting the ratio of Hb in ZIF-8 frameworks. Intriguingly, Hb encapsulated by ZIF-8 exhibited significantly enhanced stability in alkaline, oxidation, high temperature, or enzymatic environment compared with free Hb because of the excellent protective MOF coatings. More importantly, the negative charge of Hb neutralized the original positive charge of ZIF-8, which led to the better biocompatibility, lower protein adsorption, and macrophage uptake of ZIF-8@Hb than bare ZIF-8 nanoparticles. Furthermore, ZIF-8@Hb displayed extended blood circulation with the elimination half-life of 13.9 h as well as reduced nonspecific distribution in normal organs compared with free Hb or ZIF-8 nanoparticles. With the above advantages, ZIF-8@Hb showed significantly extended survival time of mice in a disease model of hemorrhagic shock compared with free Hb or bare ZIF-8 nanoparticles. Overall, this work offers a high-stable and long-circulating oxygen carrier platform, which may find wide applications as a blood substitute to treat various oxygen-relevant diseases.

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