Advanced Science (Apr 2023)
Lymphocyte Membrane‐ and 12p1‐Dual‐Functionalized Nanoparticles for Free HIV‐1 Trapping and Precise siRNA Delivery into HIV‐1‐Infected Cells
Abstract
Abstract Despite the success of small interfering RNA (siRNA) in clinical settings and its potential value in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) therapy, the rapid clearance and absence of precise delivery to target cells still hinder the therapeutic effect of siRNA. Herein, a new system, which can escape immune recognition, has HIV‐1 neutralizing capacity, and the ability to deliver siRNA specifically into HIV‐1‐infected cells, is constructed by functionalizing siRNA delivery lipid nanoparticles with the lymphocyte membrane and 12p1. The constructed system is shown to escape uptake by the mononuclear phagocyte system. The constructed system exhibits strong binding ability with gp120, thus displaying distinguished neutralizing breadth and potency. The constructed system neutralizes all tested HIV‐1 pseudotyped viruses with a geometric mean 80% inhibitory concentration (IC80) of 29.75 µg mL−1 and inhibits X4‐tropic HIV‐1 with an IC80 of 64.20 µg mL−1, and R5‐tropic HIV‐1 with an IC80 of 16.39 µg mL−1. The new system also specifically delivers siRNA into the cytoplasm of HIV‐1‐infected cells and exhibits evident gene silencing of tat and rev. Therefore, this new system can neutralize HIV‐1 and deliver siRNA selectively into HIV‐1‐infected cells and may be a promising therapeutic candidate for the precise therapy of HIV.
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