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Advanced peptide nanoparticles enable robust and efficient delivery of gene editors across cell types

Authors

  • Oskar Gustafsson
  • Supriya Krishna
  • Sophia Borate
  • Marziyeh Ghaeidamini
  • Xiuming Liang
  • Osama Saher
  • Raul Cuellar
  • Björn K Birdsong
  • Samantha Roudi
  • H Yesid Estupiñán
  • Evren Alici
  • C I Edvard Smith
  • Elin K Esbjörner
  • Simone Spuler
  • Olivier Gerrit de Jong
  • Helena Escobar
  • Joel Z Nordin
  • Samir E L Andaloussi

Journal

  • Journal of Controlled Release

Citation

  • J Control Release 386: 114038

Abstract

  • Efficient delivery of the CRISPR/Cas9 system and its larger derivatives, base editors, and prime editors remain a major challenge, particularly in tissue-specific stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). This study optimized a novel family of cell-penetrating peptides, hPep, to deliver gene-editing ribonucleoproteins. The hPep-based nanoparticles enable highly efficient and biocompatible delivery of Cre recombinase, Cas9, base-, and prime editors. Using base editors, robust and nearly complete genome editing was achieved in the human cells: HEK293T (96%), iPSCs (74%), and muscle stem cells (80%). This strategy opens promising avenues for ex vivo and, potentially, in vivo applications. Incorporating silica particles enhanced the system’s versatility, facilitating cargo-agnostic delivery. Notably, the nanoparticles can be synthesized quickly on a benchtop and stored as lyophilized powder without compromising functionality. This represents an important advancement in the feasibility and scalability of gene-editing delivery technologies.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2025.114038