Spatial Organization of Lipid Nanoparticle siRNA Delivery Systems Revealed by an Integrated Magnetic Resonance Approach.
Gal Porat-DahlerbruchIvan V SergeyevCaitlin M QuinnJochem StruppeDaniel BanksCharles DahlheimDonald JohnsonDenette MurphyAndrew IlottAnuji AbrahamTatyana PolenovaPublished in: Small methods (2024)
Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are increasingly finding applications in targeted drug delivery, including for subcutaneous, intravenous, inhalation, and vaccine administration. While a variety of microscopy techniques are widely used for LNP characterization, their resolution does not allow for characterization of the spatial organization of different components, such as the excipients, targeting agents, or even the active ingredient. Herein, an approach is presented to probe the spatial organization of individual constituent groups of LNPs used for siRNA-based drug delivery, currently in clinical trials, by multinuclear solid-state magic-angle-spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) spectroscopy. Dynamic nuclear polarization is exploited (DNP) for sensitivity enhancement, together with judicious 2 H labeing, to detect functionally important LNP constituents, the siRNA and the targeting agent (<1-2 w/v%), respectively, and achieve a structural model of the LNP locating the siRNA in the core, the targeting agent below the surface, and the sugars above the lipid bilayer at the surface. The integrated approach presented here is applicable for structural analysis of LNPs and can be extended more generally to other multi-component biological formulations.