DNA Origami Nanostructures Elicit Dose-Dependent Immunogenicity and Are Nontoxic up to High Doses In Vivo

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Abstract

DNA origami (DO) nanotechnology enables the construction of precise nanostructures capable of functionalization with small molecule drugs, nucleic acids, and proteins, suggesting a promising platform for biomedical applications. Despite the potential for drug and vaccine delivery, the impact of DO vehicles on immunogenicity in vivo is not well understood. Here, two DO vehicles, a flat triangle and a nanorod, at varying concentrations are evaluated in vitro and with a repeated dosing regimen administered at a high dose in vivo to study early and late immunogenicity. The studies show normal CD11b+ myeloid cell populations preferentially internalize DO in vitro. DO structures distribute well systemically in vivo, elicit a modest pro-inflammatory immune response that diminishes over time and are nontoxic as shown by weight, histopathology, lack of cytokine storm, and a complete biochemistry panel at the day 10 end point. The results take critical steps to characterize the biological response to DO and suggest that DO vehicles represent a promising platform for drug delivery and vaccine development where immunogenicity should be a key consideration.

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Lucas, C. R., Halley, P. D., Chowdury, A. A., Harrington, B. K., Beaver, L., Lapalombella, R., … Castro, C. E. (2022). DNA Origami Nanostructures Elicit Dose-Dependent Immunogenicity and Are Nontoxic up to High Doses In Vivo. Small, 18(26). https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202108063

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