Antibody-Functionalized Gold Nanostar-Mediated On-Resonance Picosecond Laser Optoporation for Targeted Delivery of RNA Therapeutics.

2021 
The rapid advances of genetic and genomic technology indicate promising therapeutic potential of genetic materials for regulating abnormal gene expressions causing diseases and disorders. However, targeted intracellular delivery of RNA therapeutics still remains a major challenge hindering the clinical translation. In this study, an elaborated plasmonic optoporation approach is proposed to efficiently and selectively transfect specific cells. The site-specific optoporation is obtained by tuning the spectral range of a supercontinuum pulsed picosecond laser in order for each individual cell binding gold nanostar with their unique resonance peak to magnify the local field strength in the near-infrared region and facilitate a selective delivery of small interfering RNA, messenger RNA, and Cas9-ribonucleoprotein into human retinal pigment epithelial cells. Numerical simulations indicate that optoporation is not due to a plasma-mediated process but rather due to a highly localized temperature rise both in time (few nanoseconds) and space (few nanometers). Taking advantage of the numerical simulation and fine-tuning of the optical strategy, the perforated lipid bilayer of targeted cells undergoes a membrane recovery process, important to retain their viability. The results signify the prospects of antibody functionalized nanostar-mediated optoporation as a simple and realistic gene delivery approach for future clinical practices.
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