PEGylated and targeted extracellular vesicles display enhanced cell specificity and circulation time

Publication date

2016-02-28

Authors

Kooijmans, Sander A AISNI 0000000419569707
Fliervoet, Lies A.L.ISNI 0000000493298853
van der Meel, RoyISNI 0000000419514423
Fens, Marcel HISNI 0000000387629137
Heijnen, H. F G
van Bergen En Henegouwen, Paul M PORCID 0000-0001-6050-9042ISNI 0000000387765753
Vader, PieterISNI 0000000396341338
Schiffelers, Raymond MISNI 0000000045237985

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are increasingly being recognized as candidate drug delivery systems due to their ability to functionally transfer biological cargo between cells. However, the therapeutic applicability of EVs may be limited due to a lack of cell-targeting specificity and rapid clearance of exogenous EVs from the circulation. In order to improve EV characteristics for drug delivery to tumor cells, we have developed a novel method for decorating EVs with targeting ligands conjugated to polyethylene glycol (PEG). Nanobodies specific for the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) were conjugated to phospholipid (DMPE)-PEG derivatives to prepare nanobody-PEG-micelles. When micelles were mixed with EVs derived from Neuro2A cells or platelets, a temperature-dependent transfer of nanobody-PEG-lipids to the EV membranes was observed, indicative of a 'post-insertion' mechanism. This process did not affect EV morphology, size distribution, or protein composition. After introduction of PEG-conjugated control nanobodies to EVs, cellular binding was compromised due to the shielding properties of PEG. However, specific binding to EGFR-overexpressing tumor cells was dramatically increased when EGFR-specific nanobodies were employed. Moreover, whereas unmodified EVs were rapidly cleared from the circulation within 10 min after intravenous injection in mice, EVs modified with nanobody-PEG-lipids were still detectable in plasma for longer than 60 min post-injection. In conclusion, we propose post-insertion as a novel technique to confer targeting capacity to isolated EVs, circumventing the requirement to modify EV-secreting cells. Importantly, insertion of ligand-conjugated PEG-derivatized phospholipids in EV membranes equips EVs with improved cell specificity and prolonged circulation times, potentially increasing EV accumulation in targeted tissues and improving cargo delivery.

Keywords

Circulation time, Drug delivery, Extracellular vesicles, Nanobody, Polyethylene glycol, Targeting, Taverne, Pharmaceutical Science

Citation

Kooijmans, S A A, Fliervoet, L A L, Van Der Meel, R, Fens, M H A M, Heijnen, H F G, Van Bergen En Henegouwen, P M P, Vader, P & Schiffelers, R M 2016, 'PEGylated and targeted extracellular vesicles display enhanced cell specificity and circulation time', Journal of Controlled Release, vol. 224, pp. 77-85. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2016.01.009