GEV Sod2 Powder: A Modified Product Based on Biovesicles Functioned in Air Pollution PM2.5-Induced Cardiopulmonary Injury

Research (Wash D C). 2025 Feb 13:8:0609. doi: 10.34133/research.0609. eCollection 2025.

Abstract

The prevention of air pollution-related cardiopulmonary disorders has been largely overlooked despite its important burden. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have shown great potential as carriers for drug delivery. However, the efficiency and effect of EVs derived from different sources on ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5)-induced cardiopulmonary injury remain unknown. Using PM2.5-exposed cellular and mouse models, we investigated the prevention of air pollution-related cardiopulmonary injury via an innovative strategy based on EV delivery. By using a "2-step" method that combines bibliometric and bioinformatic analysis, we identified superoxide dismutase 2 (Sod2) as a potential target for PM2.5-induced injury. Sod2-overexpressing plasmid was constructed and loaded into human plasma-, bovine milk-, and fresh grape-derived EVs, ultimately obtaining modified nanoparticles including PEV Sod2 , MEV Sod2 , and GEV Sod2 , respectively. GEV Sod2 , especially its lyophilized GEV Sod2 powder, exhibited superior protection against PM2.5-induced cardiopulmonary injury as compared to PEV Sod2 and MEV Sod2 . High-sensitivity structured illumination microscopy imaging and immunoblotting showed that GEV Sod2 powder treatment altered lysosome positioning by reducing Rab-7 expression. Our findings support the use of fruit-derived EVs as a preferred candidate for nucleic acid delivery and disease treatment, which may facilitate the translation of treatments for cardiopulmonary injuries.