Branching Ionizable Lipids Can Enhance the Stability, Fusogenicity, and Functional Delivery of mRNA
Kazuki Hashiba,
Yusuke Sato,
Masamitsu Taguchi,
Sachiko Sakamoto,
Ayaka Otsu,
Yoshiki Maeda,
Takuya Shishido,
Masao Murakawa,
Arimichi Okazaki,
Hideyoshi Harashima
Affiliations
Kazuki Hashiba
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Yusuke Sato
Laboratory for Molecular Design of Pharmaceutics, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences Hokkaido University Kita-12, Nishi-6 Kita-Ku Sapporo 060-0812 Japan
Masamitsu Taguchi
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Sachiko Sakamoto
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Ayaka Otsu
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Yoshiki Maeda
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Takuya Shishido
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Masao Murakawa
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Arimichi Okazaki
Nucleic Acid Medicine Business Division Nitto Denko Corporation 1-1-2, Shimohozumi Ibaraki Osaka 567-8680 Japan
Hideyoshi Harashima
Laboratory for Molecular Design of Pharmaceutics, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences Hokkaido University Kita-12, Nishi-6 Kita-Ku Sapporo 060-0812 Japan
Ionizable lipids with branched tails have been used in lipid nanoparticles (LNPs)‐based messenger RNA (mRNA) therapeutics like COVID‐19 vaccines. However, due to the limited commercial availability of branched ingredients, a systematic analysis of how the branched tails affect LNP quality has been lacking to date. Herein, α‐branched tail lipids are focused, as they can be synthesized from simple commercially available chemicals, and the length of each chain can be independently controlled. Furthermore, symmetry and total carbon number can be used to describe α‐branched tails, facilitating the design of a systematic lipid library to elucidate “structure–property–function” relationships. Consequently, a lipid library is developed containing 32 different types of α‐branched tails. This library is used to demonstrate that branched chains increase LNP microviscosity and headgroup ionization ability in an acidic environment, which in turn enhances the stability and in vivo efficacy of mRNA‐LNPs. Of the branched lipids, CL4F 8‐6 LNPs carrying Cas9 mRNA and sgRNA could achieve 54% genome editing and 77% protein reduction with a single dose of 2.5 mg kg−1. This mechanism‐based data on branched lipids is expected to provide insights into rational lipid design and effective gene therapy in the future.