Harnessing the composition of lipid nanoparticles to selectively deliver mRNA to splenic immune cells for anticancer vaccination

被引:0
|
作者
Younis, Mahmoud A. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Sato, Yusuke [2 ,4 ]
Elewa, Yaser H. A. [5 ,6 ]
Harashima, Hideyoshi [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Hokkaido Univ, Fac Pharmaceut Sci, Lab Innovat Nanomed, Kita 12,Nishi 6,Kita Ku, Sapporo 0600812, Japan
[2] Hokkaido Univ, Inst Vaccine Res & Dev IVReD, Kita 21,Nishi 11,Kita ku, Sapporo 0010021, Japan
[3] Assiut Univ, Fac Pharm, Dept Ind Pharm, Assiut 71526, Egypt
[4] Hokkaido Univ, Fac Pharmaceut Sci, Lab Mol Design Pharmaceut, Kita 12,Nishi 6,Kita ku, Sapporo 0600812, Japan
[5] Zagazig Univ, Fac Vet Med, Dept Histol & Cytol, Zagazig 44511, Egypt
[6] Hokkaido Univ, Fac Vet Med, Kita 18,Nishi 9,Kita ku, Sapporo 0600818, Japan
关键词
Anticancer vaccine; Antigen-presenting cells; Lipid nanoparticles; mRNA; Clinical translation; SIRNA; NEUTROPHILS; PHENOTYPE;
D O I
10.1007/s13346-025-01824-w
中图分类号
TH7 [仪器、仪表];
学科分类号
0804 ; 080401 ; 081102 ;
摘要
Herein, we report a design for lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) that specifically delivers mRNA to splenic immune cells post intravenous administration for potential anticancer vaccination applications. A diverse library of ionizable lipids was screened in vivo, in combination with various helper lipids, where the composition of LNPs was tweaked to control their in vivo performance. The biodistribution of the LNPs was then investigated at both organ and sub-organ levels. Subsequently, the LNPs were recruited to deliver an anticancer mRNA-based vaccine to mice. The in vivo tropism of the LNPs was dramatically affected by the chemical structure of the ionizable lipids in question, where a model lipid, CL15H6, was recognized as displaying high affinity for the spleen. Further optimization of the composition of the LNPs enabled highly efficient and spleen-selective mRNA delivery, where the optimized CL15H6 LNPs demonstrated a high capacity for homing to splenic antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Furthermore, loading the LNPs with a low dose of ovalbumin-encoding mRNA (mOVA), as a model antigen, protected the mice against OVA-expressing tumor challenges and suppressed the tumor growth in tumor-bearing mice by similar to 75%, which was superior to the results of a clinically-relevant formulation. The CL15H6 LNPs proved to be biosafe upon either acute dose escalation or repeated administrations. The novel and scalable platform reported herein is promising for clinical translation as a neoantigen vaccine.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Using Lipid Nanoparticles for the Delivery of Chemically Modified mRNA into Mammalian Cells
    Mahalingam, Gokulnath
    Mohan, Aruna
    Arjunan, Porkizhi
    Dhyani, Ajay Kumar
    Subramaniyam, Kanimozhi
    Periyasamy, Yogapriya
    Marepally, Srujan
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2022, (184):
  • [32] Charge-assisted stabilization of lipid nanoparticles enables inhaled mRNA delivery for mucosal vaccination
    Liu, Shuai
    Wen, Yixing
    Shan, Xinzhu
    Ma, Xinghuan
    Yang, Chen
    Cheng, Xingdi
    Zhao, Yuanyuan
    Li, Jingjiao
    Mi, Shiwei
    Huo, Haonan
    Li, Wei
    Jiang, Ziqiong
    Li, Yijia
    Lin, Jiaqi
    Miao, Lei
    Lu, Xueguang
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 15 (01)
  • [33] Lipid nanoparticles - Metvan: revealing a novel way to deliver a vanadium compound to bone cancer cells
    Cacicedo, M. L.
    Ruiz, M. C.
    Scioli-Montoto, S.
    Ruiz, M. E.
    Fernandez, M. A.
    Torres-Sanchez, R. M.
    Baran, E. J.
    Castro, G. R.
    Leon, I. E.
    NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2019, 43 (45) : 17726 - 17734
  • [34] Enhanced Pulmonary and Splenic mRNA Delivery Using DOTAP-Incorporated Poly(β-Amino Ester)-Lipid Nanoparticles
    Gao, Yuduo
    Zhang, Luwei
    Wang, Ziyue
    Bai, Hao
    Wu, Chengfan
    Shuai, Qi
    Yan, Yunfeng
    BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2025, 26 (01) : 623 - 634
  • [35] Methylprednisolone substituted lipid nanoparticles deliver C3 transferase mRNA for combined treatment of spinal cord injury
    Dong, Haoru
    He, Zongxing
    Cai, Shiyi
    Ma, Haiqiang
    Su, Lili
    Li, Jianfeng
    Yang, Huiying
    Xie, Rong
    JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY, 2025, 23 (01)
  • [36] Circulating immune cells with megakaryocyte signature in response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination
    Kanaji, Taisuke
    Morodomi, Yosuke
    Kanaji, Sachiko
    THROMBOSIS RESEARCH, 2022, 220 : 1 - 4
  • [37] Low-inflammatory lipid nanoparticles facilitate safe mRNA vaccination against influenza virus infection
    Xu, Yuehua
    Zhai, Guangxi
    Yang, Da-Peng
    Chen, Gang
    MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2025, 33 (02) : 430 - 431
  • [38] In Vivo Modification of Hematopoietic Stem Cells By Targeted Lipid Nanoparticles Encapsulating mRNA
    Breda, Laura
    Papp, Tyler E.
    Triebwasser, Michael
    Yadegari, Amir
    Fedorky, Megan T.
    Tanaka, Naoto
    Ni, Houping
    Weissman, Drew
    Rivella, Stefano
    Parhiz, Hamideh
    BLOOD, 2022, 140
  • [39] INCREASED TRANSFECTION OFT AND NK CELLS WITH MRNA LIPID NANOPARTICLES FOR CELLULAR IMMUNOTHERAPIES
    Kunitskaya, A.
    Chen, S.
    Blakney, A. K.
    Piret, J.
    CYTOTHERAPY, 2024, 26 (06) : S188 - S189
  • [40] Zwitterionic Polymer-Decorated Lipid Nanoparticles for mRNA Delivery in Mammalian Cells
    Khunsuk, Phim-on
    Pongma, Chitsuda
    Palaga, Tanapat
    Hoven, Voravee P.
    BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2023, 24 (12) : 5654 - 5665