Adv Healthc Mater. 2022 Jan 10.
e2102145
Genetic medicine has great potential to treat the underlying causes of many human diseases with exquisite precision, but the field has historically been stymied by delivery as the central challenge. Nanoparticles, engineered constructs the size of natural viruses, are being designed to more closely mimic the delivery efficiency of viruses, while enabling the advantages of increased safety, cargo carrying flexibility, specific targeting, and ease in manufacturing. The speed in which non-viral gene transfer nanoparticles are making progress in the clinic is accelerating, with clinical validation of multiple non-viral nucleic acid delivery nanoparticle formulations recently FDA approved for both expression and for silencing of genes. While much of this progress has been with lipid nanoparticle formulations, significant development is being made with other nanomaterials for gene transfer as well, with favorable attributes such as biodegradability, scalability, and cell targeting. This review highlights the state of the field, current challenges in delivery, and opportunities for engineered nanomaterials to meet these challenges, including enabling long-term therapeutic gene editing. Delivery technology utilizing different kinds of nanomaterials and varying cargos for gene transfer (DNA, mRNA and ribonucleoproteins) are discussed. Clinical applications are presented, including for the treatment of genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keywords: CRISPR; DNA; cystic fibrosis; gene editing; gene therapy; mRNA; nanoparticle