Back to Search Start Over

Highly efficient CD4+ T cell targeting and genetic recombination using engineered CD4+ cell-homing mRNA-LNPs.

Authors :
Tombácz I
Laczkó D
Shahnawaz H
Muramatsu H
Natesan A
Yadegari A
Papp TE
Alameh MG
Shuvaev V
Mui BL
Tam YK
Muzykantov V
Pardi N
Weissman D
Parhiz H
Source :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy [Mol Ther] 2021 Nov 03; Vol. 29 (11), pp. 3293-3304. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jun 04.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Nucleoside-modified messenger RNA (mRNA)-lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are the basis for the first two EUA (Emergency Use Authorization) COVID-19 vaccines. The use of nucleoside-modified mRNA as a pharmacological agent opens immense opportunities for therapeutic, prophylactic and diagnostic molecular interventions. In particular, mRNA-based drugs may specifically modulate immune cells, such as T lymphocytes, for immunotherapy of oncologic, infectious and other conditions. The key challenge, however, is that T cells are notoriously resistant to transfection by exogenous mRNA. Here, we report that conjugating CD4 antibody to LNPs enables specific targeting and mRNA interventions to CD4+ cells, including T cells. After systemic injection in mice, CD4-targeted radiolabeled mRNA-LNPs accumulated in spleen, providing ∼30-fold higher signal of reporter mRNA in T cells isolated from spleen as compared with non-targeted mRNA-LNPs. Intravenous injection of CD4-targeted LNPs loaded with Cre recombinase-encoding mRNA provided specific dose-dependent loxP-mediated genetic recombination, resulting in reporter gene expression in about 60% and 40% of CD4+ T cells in spleen and lymph nodes, respectively. T cell phenotyping showed uniform transfection of T cell subpopulations, with no variability in uptake of CD4-targeted mRNA-LNPs in naive, central memory, and effector cells. The specific and efficient targeting and transfection of mRNA to T cells established in this study provides a platform technology for immunotherapy of devastating conditions and HIV cure.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of interests H.P., I.T., N.P., V.R.M., and D.W. are inventors on a patent filed on some aspects of this work. Those interests have been fully disclosed to the University of Pennsylvania. All other authors declare no competing interests.<br /> (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1525-0024
Volume :
29
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34091054
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2021.06.004