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Genetically encoding multiple functionalities into extracellular vesicles for the targeted delivery of biologics to T cells.

Devin M StranfordLacy M SimonsKatherine E BermanLuyi ChengBeth N DiBiaseMichelle E HungJulius B LucksJudd F HultquistJoshua N Leonard
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2023)
The genetic modification of T cells has advanced cellular immunotherapies, yet the delivery of biologics specifically to T cells remains challenging. Here we report a suite of methods for the genetic engineering of cells to produce extracellular vesicles (EVs)-which naturally encapsulate and transfer proteins and nucleic acids between cells-for the targeted delivery of biologics to T cells without the need for chemical modifications. Specifically, the engineered cells secreted EVs that actively loaded protein cargo via a protein tag and that displayed high-affinity T-cell-targeting domains and fusogenic glycoproteins. We validated the methods by engineering EVs that delivered Cas9-single-guide-RNA complexes to ablate the gene encoding the C-X-C chemokine co-receptor type 4 in primary human CD4 + T cells. The strategy is amenable to the targeted delivery of biologics to other cell types.
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