| Literature DB >> 32373229 |
Apresio K Fajrial1, Qing Qing He1, Nurul I Wirusanti2, Jill E Slansky3, Xiaoyun Ding1.
Abstract
Gene editing is a versatile technique in biomedicine that promotes fundamental research as well as clinical therapy. The development of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) as a genome editing machinery has accelerated the application of gene editing. However, the delivery of CRISPR components often suffers when using conventional transfection methods, such as viral transduction and chemical vectors, due to limited packaging size and inefficiency toward certain cell types. In this review, we discuss physical transfection methods for CRISPR gene editing which can overcome these limitations. We outline different types of physical transfection methods, highlight novel techniques to deliver CRISPR components, and emphasize the role of micro and nanotechnology to improve transfection performance. We present our perspectives on the limitations of current technology and provide insights on the future developments of physical transfection methods. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR delivery; gene editing; intracellular delivery; micro/nanotechnology; physical transfection; transfection methods
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32373229 PMCID: PMC7196308 DOI: 10.7150/thno.43465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Glossary
| Adherent cell | Also termed anchorage-dependent cell, is a type of cell which grows and spreads by adhering to the bottom surface of a tissue culture flask. Tissue-derived cells are commonly considered as adherent cells. |
|---|---|
| A type of acoustic wave propagating inside the materials medium. Conventional sonoporation uses bulk acoustic wave for transfection. | |
| A type of immune cell whose main function is to process and present antigen to activate adaptive immune response. Viral transfection to dendritic cell (DC) increases DC's immunogenicity and maturation. | |
| A movement of neutral particle in a medium with different polarizabilities under the influence of a non-uniform electric field. | |
| An active internalization process of substances from the cell's environment into the cell by forming a membrane-bounded vesicle. | |
| Procedure in which cells or tissues are taken out from a living organism to receive treatment and subsequently returned to the living body. | |
| Procedure in which cell or tissues are isolated and treated outside of their natural biological environment. It may involve growing cells in test tube, flask, or petri dish to facilitate a more convenient analysis. | |
| Procedure that is conducted in a whole living organism as opposed to parts of organism. | |
| A type of white blood cell found in the lymphatic system. There are two types of lymphocytes: B lymphocytes which create antibodies and T lymphocytes which attack infected and tumor cells. | |
| Technology at the micrometers (10-6 meters). Representation of microtechnology in transfection method includes the use of microfluidics and microelectrodes. | |
| Technology at the nanometers (10-9 meters). Representation of nanotechnology in transfection method includes the use of nanoparticles, nanoneedles, nanostraws, and nanotubes. | |
| A part of innate immune system that can kill infected and tumor cells. | |
| In gene editing, nuclease acts as an enzyme that cleaves the bonds between nucleotides in nucleic acids and allows the editing of nucleotide sequence. | |
| Peripheral blood mononuclear cell, comprises of blood cell with round nucleus including lymphocytes (B cells, T cells, NK cells) and monocytes. | |
| The interaction which emerges from the coupling of visible light and free electrons in metallic nanostructures. The plasmonic effect generates a localized heating for precise cell membrane permeabilization. | |
| A force in a parallel direction to the contact surface. Fluid flowing around the cells generates this type of force which may permeabilize the cell membrane. | |
| A result of transfection in which the gene is integrated into the cells genome, thus the modification will be passed down to daughter cells. Gene therapy mainly aims for stable transfection. | |
| An acoustic wave propagating on the surface of the materials. SAW is preferable for microfluidics technology due to its controllability and ease of integration in microsystem environment. | |
| A type of cell which grows free-floating in the suspension medium, such as hematopoietic cell lines. Suspension cells are traditionally considered hard to transfect. | |
| A process to introduce nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) and proteins into mammalian cells in order to change the cells' behavior. | |
| A result of transfection in which the gene is not integrated into the genome, thus modification is transient for a limited period of time. |
CRISPR/Cas9 Delivery Formats
| Format | Time to Cas9 Onset Expression | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| pDNA | 5 hours | Low cost of production | High possibility of insertional mutagenesis |
| mRNA | 1 hour | No insertional mutagenesis | High cost of production |
| RNP | Immediately | High editing efficiency | High cost of production |
Major Viral Vectors for Gene Delivery
| Viral vectors | Genome Type and Capacity | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | dsDNA8 kb | Effective transduction to non-dividing cells | High immunogenicity |
| Adeno-associated virus | ssDNA4 kb | Effective transduction to non-dividing cells | Small packaging capacity, may require co-transduction for CRISPR |
| Retrovirus | ssRNA8 kb | Genome integration into host cell | Unsuitable to non-dividing cells |
| Lentivirus | ssRNA8 kb | Effective transduction to non-dividing cells | High possibility of insertional mutagenesis |
Ongoing and Completed Clinical Trials Employing Physical Methods for Gene Delivery
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier | Physical Methods | Cargo Type | Target Cells | Start Year | Aim |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00684294 | Electroporation | plasmid DNA | Tumor cells | 2008 | Tumor cell vaccine for advanced cancer |
| NCT01530698 | Electroporation | mRNA | Dendritic cells | 2010 | Dendritic cell vaccine for melanoma |
| NCT00968760 | Electroporation | plasmid DNA | T cells | 2011 | T cell immunotherapy for B lymphoma |
| NCT01456104 | Electroporation | mRNA | Dendritic cells | 2011 | Dendritic cell vaccine for melanoma |
| NCT02315118 | Electroporation | mRNA | T cells | 2014 | T cell immunotherapy for B lymphoma |
| NCT01995708 | Electroporation | mRNA | Dendritic cells | 2014 | Dendritic cell vaccine for multiple myeloma |
| NCT02117518 | Electroporation | mRNA | T cells | 2014 | Immunotargeting of reactive T cells which induces Type 1 Diabetes |
| NCT03083054 | Electroporation | mRNA | Dendritic cells | 2016 | Dendritic cell vaccine to suppress leukemia progression |
| NCT03166878 | Electroporation | mRNA | T cells | 2017 | Universal CAR-T cell for B lymphoma |
| NCT03415100 | Electroporation | mRNA | Natural killer cells | 2018 | Enhancing cell therapy specificity and activity for metastatic solid tumors |
| NCT03399448 | Electroporation | RNP | T cells | 2018 | Enhancing immune activity of the T cells toward refractory cancer |
| NCT04084951 | Mechanical | Protein | PBMC | 2020 | Enhancing immune response against tumor cells expressing HPV16 E6 and E7 |
Representative Commercial Products Utilizing Physical Transfection
| Physical Methods | Company | Products | Product Type | Technology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical | Indee Labs | Device | Microfluidic vortex shedding | |
| Mechanical | CellFE | Device | Microfluidic constriction | |
| Mechanical | SQZ Biotech | SQZ-PBMC-HPV | Cell therapy | Microfluidic constriction |
| Mechanical & Electrical | OpenCell Technologies | POROS-EP | Device | Combination of acoustic shear poration and electrophoresis |
| Electrical | Lonza | Nucleofector | Device | Conventional electroporation |
| Electrical | Biorad | Gene Pulsar | Device | Conventional electroporation |
| Electrical | ThermoFisher Scientific | Neon Transfection System | Device | Conventional electroporation |
| Electrical | Miltenyi Biotec | CliniMACS® Electroporator | Device | Automated conventional electroporation |
| Electrical | MaxCyte | MaxCyte STX® | Device | Flow electroporation |
| CARMA™ | Cell therapy | |||
| Electrical | Celetrix | CTX Electroporator | Device | Tube electroporation |
| Electrical | Infinitesimal | NFP-E™ | Device | Nanostructure-mediated electroporation |
| Electrical | NAVAN Technologies | Device | Nanostructure-mediated electroporation | |
| Laser/Thermal | Cellino Biotech | Device | Nanostructure-mediated plasmonic poration | |
| Magnetic | OZ Biosciences | Magnetofection™ | Reagent | Magnetic particle-assisted transfection |
| Magnetic | PromoCell | MATra | Reagent | Magnetic particle-assisted transfection |
Comparison of Current Physical Transfection Methods for CRISPR/Cas9
| Physical Methods | Advantages | Drawbacks | Suitable cargo | Recommended Cell Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical (non-microinjection) | Effective to difficult-to-transfect cells | Ineffective delivery for large molecules | Protein | Suspension |
| Electrical | Effective to difficult-to-transfect cells | May damage cells and cargo molecules | pDNA | Suspension (bulk) |
| Acoustoporation | High cell viability | Limited throughput | Protein | Adherent |
| Laser / optothermal | High spatial control | Low throughput | Protein | Adherent |
| Magnetic | Effective to difficult-to-transfect cells | Require chemical complex formation | pDNA | Adherent |
Summary of Physical Transfection Techniques for CRISPR Delivery
| Transfection Method | Cell Type | CRISPR Format & Dosage | Gene Editing Performance | Target Gene | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical | SU-DHL-1 lymphoma cells | Plasmid , @ - | 70% knockout of fluorescence expression, assessed via flow cytometry | EGFP | |
| MDA-MB-231 basal cells | Plasmid , @ - | 90% knockout of fluorescence expression, assessed via flow cytometry | EGFP | ||
| SK‐BR‐3 cells | RNP, @ 2 µM | 80% knockout of fluorescence expression, assessed via flow cytometry | EGFP | ||
| MDA-MB-231 basal cells | RNP, @ 2 µM | 43% editing, assessed by surveyor mutation detection assay | pMAPKs | ||
| SUM-159 cells | RNP, @ 2 µM | 47% editing, assessed by surveyor mutation detection assay | pMAPKs | ||
| Human primary T cells | RNP, @ 2 µM | 36% editing, assessed by surveyor mutation detection assay | pMAPKs | ||
| ~35% knockout of PD-1 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | PD-1 | ||||
| Human HSCs | RNP, @ 2 µM | - | C/EBPα | ||
| Human HSCs | RNP, @ 25 µM | 63% knockout of β2-microglobulin surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | B2M | ||
| Human primary T cells | RNP, @ 0.625 µM | 55% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay | PD1 | ||
| Electrical | HEK 293 cells | Plasmid, @ 200 µg/mL | - | - | |
| Human primary CD4+ T cells | RNP @ ~ 50 µM | 96% knockout of CXCR4 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CXCR4 | ||
| 98% knockout of CD127 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CD127 | ||||
| 94% knockout of CCR7 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CCR7 | ||||
| Human primary CD8+ T cells | 95% knockout of PD1 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | PD1 | |||
| 96% knockout of TIGIT surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | TIGIT | ||||
| 98% knockout of CTLA4 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CTLA4 | ||||
| Mouse CD4+ T cells | 90% knockout of CD90 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CD90 | |||
| 88% knockout of CTLA4 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CTLA4 | ||||
| Mouse CD8+ T cells | 98% knockout of CD8α surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CD8α | |||
| 93% knockout of CTLA4 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CTLA4 | ||||
| Human iPSCs | RNP, @ 0.5 µM | 52% editing of APP, assessed by T7E1 assay | APP | ||
| 70% editing of AAVS1, assessed by T7E1 assay | AAVS1 | ||||
| 59% editing of OCT4, assessed by T7E1 assay | OCT4 | ||||
| 52% editing of PD1, assessed by T7E1 assay | PD1 | ||||
| 56% editing of APP, assessed by DNA sequencing90% editing of APP with HDR DNA template, assessed by DNA sequencing48% editing of PD1, assessed by DNA sequencing62% editing of PD1 with HDR DNA template. assessed by DNA sequencing | |||||
| Human MSCs | RNP, @ 0.5 µM | 45% editing of B2M, assessed by T7E1 assay30% knockout of β2-microglobulin surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry77% knockout of β2-microglobulin surface expression with HDR DNA template, assessed via flow cytometry | B2M | ||
| Human primary T cells | RNP, @ 0.5 µM | 57% editing of PD1, assessed by T7E1 assay14% knockout of PD1 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry19% knockout of PD1 surface expression with HDR DNA template, assessed via flow cytometry | PD-1 | ||
| HEK 293 cells | RNP, @ 10 µM | 31% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay33% editing, assessed by Sanger sequencing | PPIB | ||
| HeLa cells | RNP, @ 10 µM | 24% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay | PPIB | ||
| Jurkat cells | RNP, @ 10 µM | 26% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay | |||
| Acoustic | HEC-1A cells | Plasmid, @ 2 μg/mL | 57% knockout of mRNA expression, assessed via western blot | C-erbB-2 | |
| HeLa & HEK 293 cells | Plasmid, @ 110 ng/μl | - | - | ||
| Magnetic | Porcine fibroblast | Plasmid, @ 375 ng/mL & 750 ng/mL | 15% & 27% editing, assessed by Sanger sequencing | H11 locus | |
| Hepa 1-6 cell | Plasmid in baculovirus | 35% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay | Vegfr2 | ||
| Laser/ Plasmonic | SC1 cells | sgRNA (to Cas9 expressing cells), @ 5 µM | 12% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay30% knockout of CCR7 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CCR7 | |
| RNP, @ 5 µM | 6% editing, assessed by T7E1 assay22% knockout of CCR7 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | ||||
| Mouse primary T cells | RNP, @ 5 µM | 4% knockout of CXCR3 surface expression, assessed via flow cytometry | CXCR3 | ||
| Lymph node stroma cells | RNP, @ 5 µM | 5% knockout of fluorescence expression, assessed via flow cytometry | EGFP |