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Citation

  • Authors: Kheirolomoom A. et al.
  • Year: 2022
  • Journal: Biomaterials 281 121339
  • Applications: in vitro / mRNA / jetMESSENGER
  • Cell type: Jurkat
    Description: Human acute T cell leukemia line

Method

T-cell transfection was performed by addition of CD3-targeted and non-targeted LNPs delivering mCherry mRNA at various concentrations to 5 × 105 T cells in 500 μL of Opti-MEM Reduced Serum Medium in a 12-well plate and incubated for 2 h in a 37 °C humidified incubator with 5% carbon dioxide. Transfection efficiency and T-cell activation were compared with those of jetMESSENGER® (with 1 µg mRNA) as the positive control and aCD3-liposomes as the particles not containing mRNA.

Abstract

Ex vivo programming of T cells can be efficacious but is complex and expensive; therefore, the development of methods to transfect T cells in situ is important. We developed and optimized anti-CD3-targeted lipid nanoparticles (aCD3-LNPs) to deliver tightly packed, reporter gene mRNA specifically to T cells. In vitro, targeted LNPs efficiently delivered mCherry mRNA to Jurkat T cells, and T-cell activation and depletion were associated with aCD3 antibody coating on the surface of LNPs. aCD3-LNPs, but not non-targeted LNPs, accumulated within the spleen following systemic injection, with mCherry and Fluc signals visible within 30 min after injection. At 24 h after aCD3-LNP injection, 2-4% of all splenic T cells and 2-7% of all circulating T cells expressed mCherry, and this was dependent on aCD3 coating density. Targeting and transfection were accompanied by systemic CD25+, OX40+, and CD69+ T-cell activation with temporary CD3e ligand loss and depletion of splenic and circulating subsets. Migration of splenic CD8a+ T cells from the white-pulp to red-pulp, and differentiation from naïve to memory and effector phenotypes, followed upon aCD3-LNP delivery. Additionally, aCD3-LNP injection stimulated the secretion of myeloid-derived chemokines and T-helper cytokines into plasma. Lastly, we administered aCD3-LNPs to tumor bearing mice and found that transfected T cells localized within tumors and tumor-draining lymph nodes following immunotherapy treatment. In summary, we show that CD3-targeted transfection is feasible, yet associated with complex immunological consequences that must be further studied for potential therapeutic applications.

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