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Fast and facile synthesis of amidine-incorporated degradable lipids for versatile mRNA delivery in vivo.

Xuexiang HanMohamad-Gabriel AlamehNingqiang GongLulu XueMajed GhattasGoutham BojjaJunchao XuGan ZhaoClaude C WarzechaMarshall S PadillaRakan El-MaytaGarima DwivediYing XuAndrew E VaughanJames M WilsonDrew WeissmanMichael J Mitchell
Published in: Nature chemistry (2024)
Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are widely used for mRNA delivery, with cationic lipids greatly affecting biodistribution, cellular uptake, endosomal escape and transfection efficiency. However, the laborious synthesis of cationic lipids limits the discovery of efficacious candidates and slows down scale-up manufacturing. Here we develop a one-pot, tandem multi-component reaction based on the rationally designed amine-thiol-acrylate conjugation, which enables fast (1 h) and facile room-temperature synthesis of amidine-incorporated degradable (AID) lipids. Structure-activity relationship analysis of a combinatorial library of 100 chemically diverse AID-lipids leads to the identification of a tail-like amine-ring-alkyl aniline that generally affords efficacious lipids. Experimental and theoretical studies show that the embedded bulky benzene ring can enhance endosomal escape and mRNA delivery by enabling the lipid to adopt a more conical shape. The lead AID-lipid can not only mediate local delivery of mRNA vaccines and systemic delivery of mRNA therapeutics, but can also alter the tropism of liver-tropic LNPs to selectively deliver gene editors to the lung and mRNA vaccines to the spleen.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • room temperature
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • ionic liquid
  • structure activity relationship
  • gene expression
  • computed tomography
  • dna methylation
  • drug induced
  • pet imaging