1. Academic Validation
  2. Unsaturated, Trialkyl Ionizable Lipids are Versatile Lipid-Nanoparticle Components for Therapeutic and Vaccine Applications

Unsaturated, Trialkyl Ionizable Lipids are Versatile Lipid-Nanoparticle Components for Therapeutic and Vaccine Applications

  • Adv Mater. 2023 Apr;35(15):e2209624. doi: 10.1002/adma.202209624.
Kieu Lam 1 Ada Leung 1 Alan Martin 1 Mark Wood 1 Petra Schreiner 1 Lorne Palmer 1 Owen Daly 1 Wenchen Zhao 1 Kevin McClintock 1 James Heyes 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Genevant Sciences Corporation, 887 Great Northern Way, Vancouver, BC, V5T 4T5, Canada.
Abstract

Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have proven a successful platform for the delivery of nucleic acid (NA)-based therapeutics and vaccines, with the ionizable lipid component playing a key role in modulating potency and tolerability. Here, a library of 16 novel ionizable lipids is screened hypothesizing that short, branched trialkyl hydrophobic domains can improve LNP fusogenicity or endosomal escape, and potency. LNPs formulated with the top-performing trialkyl lipid (Lipid 10) encapsulating transthyretin siRNA elicit significantly greater gene silencing and are better tolerated than those with the benchmark Onpattro lipid DLin-MC3-DMA. Lipid 10 also demonstrates superior liver delivery of mRNA when compared to other literature ionizable lipids, is well tolerated, and successfully repeat-doses in nonhuman primates. In a prime-boost hemagglutinin rodent vaccine model, intramuscular administration of Lipid-10 LNP elicits comparable or better antibody titers to the SM-102 and ALC-0315 lipid compositions used in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved mRNA COVID vaccines. These data suggest that Lipid 10 is a particularly versatile ionizable lipid, well-suited for both systemic therapeutic and intramuscular vaccine applications and able to successfully deliver diverse NA payloads.

Keywords

ionizable lipids; lipid nanoparticles; nanotechnology; nucleic acid; therapeutics; vaccines.

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