Exogenous loading of extracellular vesicles, virus-like particles, and lentiviral vectors with supercharged proteins.
Koen BreyneStefano UghettoDavid Rufino-RamosShadi MahjoumEmily A GrandellLuis Pereira de AlmeidaXandra O BreakefieldPublished in: Communications biology (2022)
Cell membrane-based biovesicles (BVs) are important candidate drug delivery vehicles and comprise extracellular vesicles, virus-like particles, and lentiviral vectors. Here, we introduce a non-enzymatic assembly of purified BVs, supercharged proteins, and plasmid DNA called pDNA-scBVs. This multicomponent vehicle results from the interaction of negative sugar moieties on BVs and supercharged proteins that contain positively charged amino acids on their surface to enhance their affinity for pDNA. pDNA-scBVs were demonstrated to mediate floxed reporter activation in culture by delivering a Cre transgene. We introduced pDNA-scBVs containing both a CRE-encoding plasmid and a BV-packaged floxed reporter into the brains of Ai9 mice. Successful delivery of both payloads by pDNA-scBVs was confirmed with reporter signal in the striatal brain region. Overall, we developed a more efficient method to load isolated BVs with cargo that functionally modified recipient cells. Augmenting the natural properties of BVs opens avenues for adoptive extracellular interventions using therapeutic loaded cargo.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- drug delivery
- gene therapy
- escherichia coli
- induced apoptosis
- cancer therapy
- amino acid
- cell cycle arrest
- physical activity
- cell therapy
- type diabetes
- artificial intelligence
- white matter
- parkinson disease
- circulating tumor
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- metabolic syndrome
- nitric oxide
- adipose tissue
- multiple sclerosis
- skeletal muscle
- machine learning
- blood brain barrier
- disease virus