Microfluidic production of nanogels as alternative triple transfection reagents for the manufacture of adeno-associated virus vectors

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Abstract

Adeno-associated viral vectors (AAVs) have proved a mainstay in gene therapy, owing to their remarkable transduction efficiency and safety profile. Their production, however, remains challenging in terms of yield, the cost-effectiveness of manufacturing procedures and large-scale production. In this work, we present nanogels produced by microfluidics as a novel alternative to standard transfection reagents such as polyethylenimine-MAX (PEI-MAX) for the production of AAV vectors with comparable yields. Nanogels were formed at pDNA weight ratios of 1 : 1 : 2 and 1 : 1 : 3, of pAAV cis-plasmid, pDG9 capsid trans-plasmid and pHGTI helper plasmid respectively, where vector yields at a small scale showed no significant difference to those of PEI-MAX. Weight ratios of 1 : 1 : 2 showed overall higher titers than 1 : 1 : 3, where nanogels with nitrogen/phosphate ratios of 5 and 10 produced yields of ≈8.8 × 108 vg mL−1 and ≈8.1 × 108 vg mL−1 respectively compared to ≈1.1 × 109 vg mL−1 for PEI-MAX. In larger scale production, optimised nanogels produced AAV at a titer of ≈7.4 × 1011 vg mL−1, showing no statistical difference from that of PEI-MAX at ≈1.2 × 1012 vg mL−1, indicating that equivalent titers can be achieved with easy-to-implement microfluidic technology at comparably lower costs than traditional reagents.

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APA

Whiteley, Z., Massaro, G., Gkogkos, G., Gavriilidis, A., Waddington, S. N., Rahim, A. A., & Craig, D. Q. M. (2023). Microfluidic production of nanogels as alternative triple transfection reagents for the manufacture of adeno-associated virus vectors. Nanoscale, 15(12), 5865–5876. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2nr06401d

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