Efficient RNA drug delivery using red blood cell extracellular vesicles

Most of the current methods for programmable RNA drug therapies are unsuitable for the clinic due to low uptake efficiency and high cytotoxicity. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) could solve these problems because they represent a natural mode of intercellular communication. However, current cellular so...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2018-06, Vol.9 (1), p.2359-15, Article 2359
Hauptverfasser: Usman, Waqas Muhammad, Pham, Tin Chanh, Kwok, Yuk Yan, Vu, Luyen Tien, Ma, Victor, Peng, Boya, Chan, Yuen San, Wei, Likun, Chin, Siew Mei, Azad, Ajijur, He, Alex Bai-Liang, Leung, Anskar Y. H., Yang, Mengsu, Shyh-Chang, Ng, Cho, William C., Shi, Jiahai, Le, Minh T. N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most of the current methods for programmable RNA drug therapies are unsuitable for the clinic due to low uptake efficiency and high cytotoxicity. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) could solve these problems because they represent a natural mode of intercellular communication. However, current cellular sources for EV production are limited in availability and safety in terms of horizontal gene transfer. One potentially ideal source could be human red blood cells (RBCs). Group O-RBCs can be used as universal donors for large-scale EV production since they are readily available in blood banks and they are devoid of DNA. Here, we describe and validate a new strategy to generate large-scale amounts of RBC-derived EVs for the delivery of RNA drugs, including antisense oligonucleotides, Cas9 mRNA, and guide RNAs. RNA drug delivery with RBCEVs shows highly robust microRNA inhibition and CRISPR–Cas9 genome editing in both human cells and xenograft mouse models, with no observable cytotoxicity. RNA delivery for disease treatment often has low uptake efficiencies and cytotoxicity. Here the authors produce extracellular vesicles from red blood cells for in vivo cargo delivery.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-04791-8