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Lipid Nanoparticle Spherical Nucleic Acids for Intracellular DNA and RNA Delivery

Andrew J. Sinegra, Michael Evangelopoulos, Jungsoo Park, Ziyin Huang, Chad A. Mirkin

2021Nano Letters94 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lipid nanoparticle SNAs (LNP-SNAs) have been synthesized for the delivery of DNA and RNA to targets in the cytoplasm of cells. Both the composition of the LNP core and surface-presented DNA sequences contribute to LNP-SNA activity. G-rich sequences enhance the activity of LNP-SNAs compared to T-rich sequences. In the LNP core, increased cholesterol content leads to greater activity. Optimized LNP-SNA candidates reduce the siRNA concentration required to silence mRNA by 2 orders of magnitude compared to liposome-based SNAs. In addition, the LNP-SNA architectures alter biodistribution and efficacy profiles in mice. For example, mRNA within LNP-SNAs injected intravenously is primarily expressed in the spleen, while mRNA encapsulated by LNPs (no DNA on the surface) was expressed primarily in the liver with a relatively small amount in the spleen. These data show that the activity and biodistribution of LNP-SNA architectures are different from those of conventional liposomal SNAs and therefore potentially can be used to target tissues.

Topics & Concepts

BiodistributionRNANucleic acidDNALiposomeIntracellularChemistrySpleenMessenger RNAMolecular biologyCytoplasmBiochemistryBiologyIn vitroImmunologyGeneRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesRNA Research and Splicing
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