TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of exosome-mimicking liposomes with conventional liposomes for intracellular delivery of siRNA
AU - Lu, Mei
AU - Zhao, Xiaoyun
AU - Xing, Haonan
AU - Xun, Zhe
AU - Zhu, Shimeng
AU - Lang, Lang
AU - Yang, Tianzhi
AU - Cai, Cuifang
AU - Wang, Dongkai
AU - Ding, Pingtian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/10/25
Y1 - 2018/10/25
N2 - Exosomes have been extensively explored as delivery vehicles due to low immunogenicity, efficient cargo delivery, and possibly intrinsic homing capacity. However, therapeutic application of exosomes is hampered by structural complexity and lack of efficient techniques for isolation and drug loading. Liposomes represent one of the most successful therapeutic nanocarriers, but are frequently criticized by short blood circulation and inefficient intracellular drug delivery. In this circumstance, a promising strategy is to facilitate a positive feedback between two fields. Herein, exosome-mimicking liposomes were formulated with DOPC/SM/Chol/DOPS/DOPE (21/17.5/30/14/17.5, mol/mol), and harnessed for delivery of VEGF siRNA to A549 and HUVEC cells. Compared with Lipo 2000 and DOTAP liposomes, exosome-mimicking liposomes exhibited less than four-fold cytotoxicity but higher storage stability and anti-serum aggregation effect. Exosome-mimicking liposomes appeared to enter A549 cells through membrane fusion, caveolae-mediated endocytosis, and macropinocytosis, while enter HUVEC through caveolae-mediated endocytosis, which revealed that the uptake pathway was dependent on cell types. Notably, exosome-mimicking liposomes exhibited significantly higher cellular uptake and silencing efficiency than PC-Chol liposomes (>three-fold), suggesting the unique lipid composition did enhance the intracellular delivery efficiency of exosome-mimicking liposomes to a significantly greater extent. However, it still remained far from satisfactory delivery as compared to cationic Lipo 2000 and DOTAP liposomes, which warranted further improvement in future research. This study may encourage further pursuit of more exosome-mimicking delivery vehicles with higher efficiency and biocompatibility.
AB - Exosomes have been extensively explored as delivery vehicles due to low immunogenicity, efficient cargo delivery, and possibly intrinsic homing capacity. However, therapeutic application of exosomes is hampered by structural complexity and lack of efficient techniques for isolation and drug loading. Liposomes represent one of the most successful therapeutic nanocarriers, but are frequently criticized by short blood circulation and inefficient intracellular drug delivery. In this circumstance, a promising strategy is to facilitate a positive feedback between two fields. Herein, exosome-mimicking liposomes were formulated with DOPC/SM/Chol/DOPS/DOPE (21/17.5/30/14/17.5, mol/mol), and harnessed for delivery of VEGF siRNA to A549 and HUVEC cells. Compared with Lipo 2000 and DOTAP liposomes, exosome-mimicking liposomes exhibited less than four-fold cytotoxicity but higher storage stability and anti-serum aggregation effect. Exosome-mimicking liposomes appeared to enter A549 cells through membrane fusion, caveolae-mediated endocytosis, and macropinocytosis, while enter HUVEC through caveolae-mediated endocytosis, which revealed that the uptake pathway was dependent on cell types. Notably, exosome-mimicking liposomes exhibited significantly higher cellular uptake and silencing efficiency than PC-Chol liposomes (>three-fold), suggesting the unique lipid composition did enhance the intracellular delivery efficiency of exosome-mimicking liposomes to a significantly greater extent. However, it still remained far from satisfactory delivery as compared to cationic Lipo 2000 and DOTAP liposomes, which warranted further improvement in future research. This study may encourage further pursuit of more exosome-mimicking delivery vehicles with higher efficiency and biocompatibility.
KW - Exosomes
KW - Intracellular delivery
KW - Liposomes
KW - Silencing efficiency
KW - siRNA
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85052138077&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2018.08.040
DO - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2018.08.040
M3 - Article
C2 - 30138707
AN - SCOPUS:85052138077
SN - 0378-5173
VL - 550
SP - 100
EP - 113
JO - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
JF - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
IS - 1-2
ER -