High-throughput barcoding of nanoparticles identifies cationic, degradable lipid-like materials for mRNA delivery to the lungs in female preclinical models

Lulu Xue(University of Pennsylvania), Alex G. Hamilton(University of Pennsylvania), Gan Zhao(University of Pennsylvania), Zebin Xiao(University of Pennsylvania), Rakan El‐Mayta(University of Pennsylvania), Xuexiang Han(University of Pennsylvania), Ningqiang Gong(University of Pennsylvania), Xinhong Xiong(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Junchao Xu(University of Pennsylvania), Christian G. Figueroa‐Espada(University of Pennsylvania), Sarah J. Shepherd(University of Pennsylvania), Alvin J. Mukalel(University of Pennsylvania), Mohamad‐Gabriel Alameh(University of Pennsylvania), Jiaxi Cui(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Karin Wang(Temple University), Andrew E. Vaughan(University of Pennsylvania), Drew Weissman(University of Pennsylvania), Michael J. Mitchell(University of Pennsylvania)
Nature Communications
February 29, 2024
Cited by 121Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Lipid nanoparticles for delivering mRNA therapeutics hold immense promise for the treatment of a wide range of lung-associated diseases. However, the lack of effective methodologies capable of identifying the pulmonary delivery profile of chemically distinct lipid libraries poses a significant obstacle to the advancement of mRNA therapeutics. Here we report the implementation of a barcoded high-throughput screening system as a means to identify the lung-targeting efficacy of cationic, degradable lipid-like materials. We combinatorially synthesize 180 cationic, degradable lipids which are initially screened in vitro. We then use barcoding technology to quantify how the selected 96 distinct lipid nanoparticles deliver DNA barcodes in vivo. The top-performing nanoparticle formulation delivering Cas9-based genetic editors exhibits therapeutic potential for antiangiogenic cancer therapy within a lung tumor model in female mice. These data demonstrate that employing high-throughput barcoding technology as a screening tool for identifying nanoparticles with lung tropism holds potential for the development of next-generation extrahepatic delivery platforms.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis