Humanized Biomimetic Nanovesicles for Neuron Targeting

Assaf Zinger, Caroline Cvetkovic, Manuela Sushnitha, Tomoyuki Naoi, Gherardo Baudo, Morgan Anderson, Arya Shetty, Nupur Basu, Jennifer Covello, Ennio Tasciotti, Moran Amit, Tongxin Xie, Francesca Taraballi, Robert Krencik

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nanovesicles (NVs) are emerging as innovative, theranostic tools for cargo delivery. Recently, surface engineering of NVs with membrane proteins from specific cell types has been shown to improve the biocompatibility of NVs and enable the integration of functional attributes. However, this type of biomimetic approach has not yet been explored using human neural cells for applications within the nervous system. Here, this paper optimizes and validates the scalable and reproducible production of two types of neuron-targeting NVs, each with a distinct lipid formulation backbone suited to potential therapeutic cargo, by integrating membrane proteins that are unbiasedly sourced from human pluripotent stem-cell-derived neurons. The results establish that both endogenous and genetically engineered cell-derived proteins effectively transfer to NVs without disruption of their physicochemical properties. NVs with neuron-derived membrane proteins exhibit enhanced neuronal association and uptake compared to bare NVs. Viability of 3D neural sphere cultures is not disrupted by treatment, which verifies the utility of organoid-based approaches as NV testing platforms. Finally, these results confirm cellular association and uptake of the biomimetic humanized NVs to neurons within rodent cranial nerves. In summary, the customizable NVs reported here enable next-generation functionalized theranostics aimed to promote neuroregeneration.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number2101437
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume8
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 6 2021

Keywords

  • biomimicry
  • human pluripotent stem cells
  • nanovesicles
  • neurons
  • organoids

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • General Chemical Engineering
  • General Materials Science
  • Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)
  • General Engineering
  • General Physics and Astronomy

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