Near-Infrared-Triggered On-Demand Controlled Release of Adeno-Associated Virus from Alginate Hydrogel Microbeads with Heat Transducer for Gene Therapy.
Shuhei TakatsukaTakeshi KubotaYuta KurashinaHiroaki OnoePublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Gene therapy using adeno-associated virus (AAV) has potential as a radical treatment modality for genetic diseases such as sensorineural deafness. To establish clinical applications, it is necessary to avoid immune response to AAV by controlled release system of AAV. Here, a near-infrared (NIR)-triggered on-demand AAV release system using alginate hydrogel microbeads with a heat transducer is proposed. By using a centrifuge-based microdroplet shooting device, the microbeads encapsulating AAV with Fe 3 O 4 microparticles (Fe 3 O 4 -MPs) as a heat transducer are fabricated. Fe 3 O 4 -MPs generated heat by NIR enhanced the diffusion speed of the AAV, resulting in the AAV being released from the microbeads. By irradiating the microbeads encapsulating fluorescent polystyrene nanoparticles (FP-NPs) (viral model) with NIR, the fluorescence intensity decreased only for FP-NPs with a diameter of 20 nm and not for 100 or 200 nm, confirming that this system can release virus with a diameter of several tens of nanometers. By irradiating NIR to the AAV-encapsulating microbeads with Fe 3 O 4 -MPs, the AAV is released on demand, and gene transfection to cells by AAV is confirmed without loss of viral activity. The NIR-triggered AAV release system proposed in this study increases the number of alternatives for the method of drug release in gene therapy.
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