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Deconvoluting Lipid Nanoparticle Structure for Messenger RNA Delivery

Yulia Eygeris, Siddharth Patel, Antony Jozić, Gaurav Sahay

2020Nano Letters362 citationsDOI

Abstract

Lipid nanoparticle (LNP) packaged mRNA vaccines have been deployed against infectious diseases such as COVID-19, yet their structural features remain unclear. Cholesterol, a major constituent within LNPs, contributes to their morphology that influences gene delivery. Herein, we examine the structure of LNPs containing cholesterol derivatives using electron microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and membrane fluidity assays. LNPs formulated with C24 alkyl derivatives of cholesterol show a polymorphic shape and various degrees of multilamellarity and lipid partitioning, likely due to phase separation. The addition of methyl and ethyl groups to the C24 alkyl tail of the cholesterol backbone induces multilamellarity (>50% increase compared to cholesterol), while the addition of a double bond induces lipid partitioning (>90% increase compared to cholesterol). LNPs with multilamellar and faceted structures, as well as a lamellar lipid phase, showed higher gene transfection. Unraveling the structure of mRNA-LNPs can enable their rational design toward enhanced gene delivery.

Topics & Concepts

Differential scanning calorimetryTransfectionLamellar structureMessenger RNAChemistryGene deliveryCholesterolBiophysicsLipid dropletAlkylLipid bilayerGeneMembraneBiochemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryCrystallographyThermodynamicsPhysicsRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
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