Novel Less Toxic, Lymphoid Tissue‐Targeted Lipid Nanoparticles Containing a Vitamin B5‐Derived Ionizable Lipid for mRNA Vaccine Delivery

Advanced Healthcare Materials, Volume 14, Issue 7, March 14, 2025.

Mar 18, 2025 - 09:53
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Novel Less Toxic, Lymphoid Tissue-Targeted Lipid Nanoparticles Containing a Vitamin B5-Derived Ionizable Lipid for mRNA Vaccine Delivery

The top-performing lipid nanoparticle, incorporating a novel ionizable lipid derived from vitamin B5, demonstrates high mRNA transfection efficiency, low toxicity, favorable stability, targeted delivery to lymphoid tissues, and high immunogenicity, showing promise as a carrier for mRNA vaccines for infectious diseases and cancer.

Abstract

Following their approval by the Food and Drug Administration, lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have emerged as promising tools for delivering mRNA vaccines and therapeutics. Ionizable lipids are among the essential components of LNPs, as they play crucial roles in encapsulating mRNA and facilitating its release into the cytosol. In this study, 17 innovative ionizable lipids using vitamin B5 are designed as the core structure, aiming to reduce toxicity, to maintain vaccine efficiency, and to ensure synthetic feasibility. The top-performing LNP in terms of mRNA vaccine delivery in the mouse model is LNP 5097, which is generated by incorporating ionizable lipid I97. mRNA⊂LNP 5097 demonstrates favorable structural and physicochemical properties, high mRNA transfection efficiency, and long-term stability. Moreover, mRNA⊂LNP 5097 specifically delivers the mRNA to the spleen and lymph nodes in model mice, induces balanced Th1/Th2 immune responses, and elicits the production of high levels of neutralizing antibodies with low toxicity. The findings here suggest the high utility of LNP 5097, which includes novel vitamin B5-derived ionizable lipids with reduced toxicity, in mRNA vaccine research for both infectious diseases and cancer.