A Microfluidics-Based Scalable Approach to Generate Extracellular Vesicles with Enhanced Therapeutic MicroRNA Loading for Intranasal Delivery to Mouse Glioblastomas.
Kai WangUday S KumarNegar SadeghipourTarik F MassoudRamasamy PaulmuruganPublished in: ACS nano (2021)
Extracellular vesicles (EVs), including exosomes and microvesicles derived from different cell sources, are used as promising nanovesicles for delivering therapeutic microRNAs (miRNAs) and drugs in cancer therapy. However, their clinical translation is limited by the quantity, size heterogeneity, and drug or small RNA loading efficiency. Herein, we developed a scalable microfluidic platform that can load therapeutic miRNAs (antimiRNA-21 and miRNA-100) and drugs while controlling the size of microfluidically processed EVs (mpEVs) using a pressure-based disruption and reconstitution process. We prepared mpEVs of optimal size using microvesicles isolated from neural stem cells engineered to overexpress CXCR4 receptor and characterized them for charge and miRNA loading efficiency. Since the delivery of therapeutic miRNAs to brain cancer is limited by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), we adopted intranasal administration of miRNA-loaded CXCR4-engineered mpEVs in orthotopic GBM mouse models and observed a consistent pattern of mpEVs trafficking across the nasal epithelia, bypassing the BBB into the intracranial compartment. In addition, the CXCR4-engineered mpEVs manifested selective tropism toward GBMs by stromal-derived factor-1 chemotaxis to deliver their miRNA cargo. The delivered miRNAs sensitized GBM cells to temozolomide, resulting in prominent tumor regression, and improved the overall survival of mice. A simple and efficient approach of packaging miRNAs in mpEVs using microfluidics, combined with a noninvasive nose-to-brain delivery route presents far-reaching potential opportunities to improve GBM therapy in clinical practice.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- single cell
- clinical practice
- blood brain barrier
- drug delivery
- neural stem cells
- high throughput
- white matter
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell migration
- squamous cell carcinoma
- multiple sclerosis
- drug induced
- climate change
- drinking water
- skeletal muscle
- cell proliferation
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- optical coherence tomography
- cell death
- adipose tissue
- cell cycle arrest
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- signaling pathway
- nucleic acid