Multifunctional polymeric nanoparticles for RNA delivery: from carrier design to cancer immunotherapy

Publication date

2018-09-10

Authors

Lou, BoISNI 0000000492910633

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Hennink, Wim E.ISNI 0000000390382745
Mastrobattista, EnricoORCID 0000-0002-6745-2015ISNI 000000035187179X

DOI

Document Type

Dissertation
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

The lack of safe and efficient gene delivery system limits the efforts to develop new RNA drugs to combat various diseases including genetic disorders, viral infections and cancer. Even though substantial success has been made with polymeric vectors, their applications has been restricted by the inefficient in vivo delivery of RNA therapeutics. With the recent technological advances and better understanding of the fundamental biological mechanisms for different diseases, development of multifunctional polymeric delivery platforms that will efficiently transport RNA therapeutics to the target site, are becoming the critical step for clinical translation. In this thesis, we have investigated different newly synthesized polymers for siRNA and mRNA delivery. With employing copper-free click chemistry, we were able to design and build multifunctional polymeric delivery system to fulfill different applications. The delivery target was from tumor cells with siRNA gene silencing to antigen presenting cells (DCs) for mRNA cancer vaccines.

Keywords

biodegradable polymer, mRNA vaccine, cancer immunotherapy, nanoparticles, click chemistry, targeting ligands, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Lou, B 2018, 'Multifunctional polymeric nanoparticles for RNA delivery : from carrier design to cancer immunotherapy', Universiteit Utrecht.