posted on 2021-12-06, 22:16authored bySuja Shrestha, Meghan J. McFadden, Allen C. T. Teng, Patrick Dong Min Chang, Joyce Deng, Tatianna W. Y. Wong, Ronald D. Cohn, Evgueni A. Ivakine, Anthony O. Gramolini, J. Paul Santerre
Developing
safe and effective strategies to deliver biomolecules
such as oligonucleotides and proteins into cells has grown in importance
over recent years, with an increasing demand for non-viral methods
that enable clinical translation. Here, we investigate uniquely configured
oligo-urethane nanoparticles based on synthetic chemistries that minimize
the release of pro-inflammatory biomarkers from immune cells, show
low cytotoxicity in a broad range of cells, and efficiently deliver
oligonucleotides and proteins into mammalian cells. The mechanism
of cell uptake for the self-assembled oligo-urethane nanoparticles
was shown to be directed by caveolae-dependent endocytosis in murine
myoblasts (C2C12) cells. Inhibiting caveolae
functions with genistein and methyl-β-cyclodextrin limited nanoparticle
internalization. The nanoparticles showed a very high delivery efficiency
for the genetic material (a 47-base oligonucleotide) (∼80%
incorporation into cells) as well as the purified protein (full length
firefly luciferase, 67 kDa) into human embryonic kidney (HEK293T)
cells. Luciferase enzyme activity in HEK293T cells demonstrated that
intact and functional proteins could be delivered and showed a significant
extension of activity retention up to 24 h, well beyond the 2 h half-life
of the free enzyme. This study introduces a novel self-assembled oligo-urethane
nanoparticle delivery platform with very low associated production
costs, enabled by their scalable chemistry (the benchwork cost is
$ 0.152/mg vs $ 974.6/mg for typical lipid carriers) that has potential
to deliver both oligonucleotides and proteins for biomedical purposes.