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Acoustofection: High-Frequency Vibrational Membrane Permeabilization for Intracellular siRNA Delivery into Nonadherent Cells

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 16:42 authored by Shwathy Ramesan, Amgad RezkAmgad Rezk, Paula Cevaal, Christina Cortez-Jugo, Jori Symons, Leslie YeoLeslie Yeo
The internalization of therapeutic molecules into cells- A critical step in enabling a suite of autologous ex vivo gene and cell therapies-is highly regulated by the lipid barrier imposed by the cell membrane. Strategies to increase the efficiency of delivering these exogenous payloads into the cell, while maintaining the integrity of both the therapeutic molecules to be delivered as well as the host cells they are delivered to, are therefore required. This is especially the case for suspension cells that are particularly difficult to transfect. In this work, we show that it is possible to enhance the uptake of short interfering RNA (siRNA) into nonadherent Jurkat and HuT 78 cells with a rapid poration-free method involving high-frequency (MHz order) acoustic excitation. The 2-fold enhancement in gene knockdown is almost comparable with that obtained with conventional nucleofection, which is among the most widely used intracellular delivery methods, but with considerably higher cell viabilities (>91% compared to approximately 76%) owing to the absence of pore formation. The rapid and effective delivery afforded by the platform, together with its low cost and scalability, therefore renders it a potent tool in the cell engineering pipeline.

History

Journal

ACS Applied Bio Materials

Volume

4

Start page

2781

End page

2789

Total pages

9

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2021 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006105933

Esploro creation date

2022-03-19

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