Literature DB >> 34914866

Mechanistic Studies of an Automated Lipid Nanoparticle Reveal Critical Pharmaceutical Properties Associated with Enhanced mRNA Functional Delivery In Vitro and In Vivo.

Lili Cui1, Morag R Hunter1, Silvia Sonzini1, Sara Pereira1, Steven M Romanelli2, Kai Liu3, Weimin Li1, Lihuan Liang4, Bin Yang1, Najet Mahmoudi5, Arpan S Desai1.   

Abstract

Recently, lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have attracted attention due to their emergent use for COVID-19 mRNA vaccines. The success of LNPs can be attributed to ionizable lipids, which enable functional intracellular delivery. Previously, the authors established an automated high-throughput platform to screen ionizable lipids and identified that the LNPs generated using this automated technique show comparable or increased mRNA functional delivery in vitro as compared to LNPs prepared using traditional microfluidics techniques. In this study, the authors choose one benchmark lipid, DLin-MC3-DMA (MC3), and investigate whether the automated formulation technique can enhance mRNA functional delivery in vivo. Interestingly, a 4.5-fold improvement in mRNA functional delivery in vivo by automated LNPs as compared to LNPs formulated by conventional microfluidics techniques, is observed. Mechanistic studies reveal that particles with large size accommodate more mRNA per LNP, possess more hydrophobic surface, are more hemolytic, bind a larger protein corona, and tend to accumulate more in macropinocytosomes, which may quantitatively benefit mRNA cytosolic delivery. These data suggest that mRNA loading per particle is a critical factor that accounts for the enhanced mRNA functional delivery of automated LNPs. These mechanistic findings provide valuable insight underlying the enhanced mRNA functional delivery to accelerate future mRNA LNP product development.
© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

Entities:  

Keywords:  hydrophobic surfaces; lipid nanoparticles; mRNA loading; macropinocytosis; particle size

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34914866     DOI: 10.1002/smll.202105832

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Small        ISSN: 1613-6810            Impact factor:   13.281


  2 in total

1.  Optimization of Lipid Nanoparticles for saRNA Expression and Cellular Activation Using a Design-of-Experiment Approach.

Authors:  Han Han Ly; Simon Daniel; Shekinah K V Soriano; Zoltán Kis; Anna K Blakney
Journal:  Mol Pharm       Date:  2022-05-23       Impact factor: 5.364

Review 2.  In vivo fate and intracellular trafficking of vaccine delivery systems.

Authors:  Jaiwoo Lee; Dongyoon Kim; Junho Byun; Yina Wu; Jinwon Park; Yu-Kyoung Oh
Journal:  Adv Drug Deliv Rev       Date:  2022-05-10       Impact factor: 17.873

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.