MRS Meetings and Events

 

SB07.04.01 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Acid Degradable Lipid Nanoparticles Efficiently Deliver mRNA to The Liver, Lung, Spleen and Multiple Other Organs

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
1:30pm - 2:00pm

Room 439, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Niren Murthy1,2

University of California, Berkeley1,U.C. Berkeley2

Abstract

Niren Murthy1,2

University of California, Berkeley1,U.C. Berkeley2
The development of acid degradable linkers that rapidly hydrolyze at endosomal pHs is a central problem in the field of drug delivery. Acid degradable linkages are challenging to develop because of their instability. In this report we present a new acid degradable linker based on an azide-acetal, which rapidly hydrolyzes at endosomal pHs but has exceptional stability at pH 7.4. The azide-acetal linkage hydrolyzes via a two-step mechanism that requires reduction and acid hydrolysis and has a unique combination of stability and rapid triggerable hydrolysis. The azide-acetal has a hydrolysis half-life of days at pH 7.4 and can be conveniently synthesized and incorporated into delivery vectors, however after in situ reduction with DTT it hydrolyzes with a t1/2<15 minutes at pH 6.0. We used the azide-acetal linker to synthesize acid degradable analogs of the lipid components of lipid nanoparticles and demonstrate that these new lipids are significantly better at delivering mRNA to mice than traditional lipids. Lipid nanoparticles containing acid degradable lipids transfected multiple non-liver organs after an intravenous injection and efficiently transfected brain tissue after an intracranial injection. The azide-acetal linkage has the potential to solve the instability problems associated with acid degradable linkers and has numerous applications in drug delivery.

Symposium Organizers

Shelley Claridge, Purdue University
Aurelia Honerkamp-Smith, Lehigh University
Elizabeth Kelley, NIST
Cecilia Leal, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature