Abstract

Previous work has shown that lipid nanoparticles (LNP) composed of an ionizable cationic lipid, a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) lipid, distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC), cholesterol, and small interfering RNA (siRNA) can be efficiently manufactured employing microfluidic mixing techniques. Cryo-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) and molecular simulation studies indicate that these LNP systems exhibit a nanostructured core with periodic aqueous compartments containing siRNA. Here we examine first how the lipid composition influences the structural properties of LNP-siRNA systems produced by microfluidic mixing and, second, whether the microfluidic mixing technique can be extended to macromolecules larger than siRNA. It is shown that LNP-siRNA systems can exhibit progressively more bilayer structure as the proportion of bilayer DSPC lipid is increased, suggesting that the core of LNP-siRNA systems can exhibit a continuum of nanostructures depending on the proportions and structural preferences of component lipids. Second, it is shown that the microfluidic mixing technique can also be extended to encapsulation of much larger negatively charged polymers such mRNA (1.7 kb) or plasmid DNA (6 kb). Finally, as a demonstration of the generality of the microfluidic mixing encapsulation process, it is also demonstrated that negatively charged gold nanoparticles (5 nm diameter) can also be efficiently encapsulated in LNP containing cationic lipids. Interestingly, the nanostructure of these gold-containing LNP reveals a "currant bun" morphology as visualized by cryo-TEM. This structure is fully consistent with LNP-siRNA structure predicted by molecular modeling.

Keywords

MicrofluidicsBilayerMacromoleculeNanoparticleLipid bilayerChemistryNanotechnologyColloidal goldBiophysicsEthylene glycolCationic polymerizationNanostructureMaterials scienceChemical engineeringMembraneBiochemistryOrganic chemistry

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Phase Boundaries and Biological Membranes

Bilayer mixtures of lipids are used by many researchers as chemically simple models for biological membranes. In particular, observations on three-component bilayer mixtures con...

2007 Annual Review of Biophysics and Biomo... 164 citations

Publication Info

Year
2015
Type
article
Volume
119
Issue
28
Pages
8698-8706
Citations
324
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

324
OpenAlex

Cite This

Alex K. K. Leung, Yuen Yi C. Tam, Sam Chen et al. (2015). Microfluidic Mixing: A General Method for Encapsulating Macromolecules in Lipid Nanoparticle Systems. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B , 119 (28) , 8698-8706. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b02891

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b02891