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Multimodal engineering of extracellular vesicles for efficient intracellular protein delivery

Authors :
Xiuming Liang
Dhanu Gupta
Junhua Xie
Elien Van Wonterghem
Lien Van Hoecke
Justin Hean
Zheyu Niu
Oscar P. B. Wiklander
Wenyi Zheng
Rim Jawad Wiklander
Rui He
Doste R. Mamand
Jeremy Bost
Guannan Zhou
Houze Zhou
Samantha Roudi
Antje M. Zickler
André Görgens
Daniel W. Hagey
Olivier G. de Jong
Aileen Geobee Uy
Yuanyuan Zong
Imre Mäger
Carla Martin Perez
Thomas C. Roberts
Pieter Vader
Roosmarijn E. Vandenbroucke
Joel Z. Nordin
Samir EL Andaloussi
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are promising tools to transfer macromolecular therapeutic molecules to recipient cells, however, efficient functional intracellular protein delivery by EVs remains challenging. Here, we have developed novel and versatile systems that leverage selected molecular tools to engineer EVs for robust cytosolic protein delivery bothin vitroandin vivo. These systems, termed VSV-G plus EV-sorting Domain-Intein-Cargo (VEDIC) and VSV-G-Foldon-Intein-Cargo (VFIC), exploit an engineered mini-intein (intein) protein with self-cleavage activity to link cargo to an EV-sorting domain and release it from the EV membrane inside the EV lumen. In addition, we utilize the fusogenic protein VSV-G to facilitate endosomal escape and cargo release from the endosomal system to the cytosol of recipient cells. Importantly, we demonstrate that the combination of the self-cleavage intein, fusogenic protein and EV-sorting domain are indispensable for efficient functional intracellular delivery of cargo proteins by engineered EVs. As such, nearly 100% recombination and close to 80% genome editing efficiency in reporter cells were observed by EV-transferred Cre recombinase and Cas9/sgRNA RNPs, respectively. Moreover, EV-mediated Cre delivery by VEDIC or VFIC engineered EVs resulted in significantin vivorecombination in Cre-LoxP R26-LSL-tdTomato reporter mice following both local and systemic injections. Finally, we applied these systems for improved treatment of LPS-induced systemic inflammation by delivering a super-repressor of NF-ĸB activity. Altogether, this study describes a platform by which EVs can be utilized as a vehicle for the efficient intracellular delivery of macromolecular therapeutics for treatments of disease.Abstract FigureGraphic summary: Development of VEDIC and VFIC systems for high-efficiency intracellular protein delivery in vitro and in vivo.Intein in tripartite fusion protein (EV-sorting Domain-Intein-Cargo) performs C-terminal cleavage during the process of EV-biogenesis, resulting in enriched free cargo proteins inside of vesicles. Together with fusogenic protein, VSV-G, these engineered EVs achieve high-efficiency intracellular delivery of cargo protein (Cre and super repressor of NF-ĸB) or protein complex (Cas9/sgRNA RNPs) both in reporter cells and in mice models.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2ee2d37e2f1330a2ef7d75170fb2572e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.30.535834