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Charge‐Stabilized Nanodiscs as a New Class of Lipid Nanoparticles

Author(s)
Pires, Ivan S; Hostetler, Alexander; Covarrubias, Gil; Carlo, Isabella S; Suggs, Jack R; Kim, BJ; Pickering, Andrew J; Gordon, Ezra; Irvine, Darrell J; Hammond, Paula T; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
Nanoparticles have the potential to improve disease treatment and diagnosis due to their ability to incorporate drugs, alter pharmacokinetics, and enable tissue targeting. While considerable effort is placed on developing spherical lipid‐based nanocarriers, recent evidence suggests that high aspect ratio lipid nanocarriers can exhibit enhanced disease site targeting and altered cellular interactions. However, the assembly of lipid‐based nanoparticles into non‐spherical morphologies has typically required incorporating additional agents such as synthetic polymers, proteins, lipid‐polymer conjugates, or detergents. Here, charged lipid headgroups are used to generate stable discoidal lipid nanoparticles from mixed micelles, which are termed charge‐stabilized nanodiscs (CNDs). The ability to generate CNDs in buffers with physiological ionic strength is restricted to lipids with more than one anionic group, whereas monovalent lipids only generate small nanoliposomal assemblies. In mice, the smaller size and anisotropic shape of CNDs promote higher accumulation in subcutaneous tumors than spherical liposomes. Further, the surface chemistry of CNDs can be modified via layer‐by‐layer (LbL) assembly to improve their tumor‐targeting properties over state‐of‐the‐art LbL‐liposomes when tested using a metastatic model of ovarian cancer. The application of charge‐mediated anisotropy in lipid‐based assemblies can aid in the future design of biomaterials and cell‐membrane mimetic structures.
Date issued
2024-11-14
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/159988
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering; Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering; Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Journal
Advanced Materials
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Pires, Ivan S, Hostetler, Alexander, Covarrubias, Gil, Carlo, Isabella S, Suggs, Jack R et al. 2024. "Charge‐Stabilized Nanodiscs as a New Class of Lipid Nanoparticles." Advanced Materials, 36 (52).
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