Intravenous mRNA-LNPs administered 1 hour post-ischemia-reperfusion injury predominantly targeted myeloid cells, while delayed administration at 3 days shifted uptake towards fibroblasts.
The timing of systemic mRNA-LNP administration after myocardial infarction critically determines which cardiac cell types internalize the nanoparticles, providing a temporal map to guide targeted cardiac regeneration therapies.
Ischemic heart disease remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. While current therapies prolong survival, they do not address underlying tissue damage. Messenger RNA (mRNA)-based therapies offer a promising alternative for repair and regeneration. However, targeted and effective delivery to the injured heart remains challenging. Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have emerged as a compelling platform for delivering therapeutics, including mRNA, yet their cellular tropism following ischemic injury is not well understood. To investigate this, we used Ai9 lineage tracing mice to map LNP uptake across cardiac cell populations during inflammatory, proliferative, and scarring phases post-ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Upon Cre delivery, tdTomato expression is induced. mRNA-LNPs encoding Cre recombinase were injected intravenously 1 hour post-reperfusion, and uptake assessed at 3, 14, and 28 days by high-dimensional flow cytometry and 3D microscopy. Three days post-IRI, myeloid cells predominantly expressed tdTomato, showing they are primary recipients of mRNA-LNPs. By days 14 and 28, the proportion of tdTomato-expressing cells was equivalent between myeloid cells and fibroblasts. Microscopy further revealed mRNA-LNP uptake by cardiomyocytes, particularly within the infarct zone and apex of the heart. We also examined dosing time, with mRNA-LNPs administered 1 h or 3 days post-IRI. Delayed administration shifted uptake from immune cells towards fibroblasts, pericytes, and endothelial cells. This is the first study presenting a high-resolution, temporal map of cell type–specific mRNA–LNP uptake in the injured heart, providing new mechanistic insight beyond prior biodistribution reports and inform the design of cell-specific therapeutic strategies to enhance cardiac repair and regeneration. • Utilized Ai9 lineage-tracing mice to precisely map cardiac cell types internalizing intravenously delivered mRNA–lipid nanoparticles (mRNA-LNPs) following ischemia–reperfusion injury (IRI). • Demonstrated robust, region-specific mRNA-LNP uptake predominantly by infiltrating myeloid cells during the acute inflammatory phase post-MI, shifting to fibroblasts during later repair stages. • Confirmed localized cardiomyocyte mRNA-LNP uptake by light-sheet microscopy, primarily within the infarcted left ventricular apex. • Showed that timing of systemic mRNA-LNP administration critically influences cell-type tropism; early dosing favors immune cell targeting, while delayed dosing enhances fibroblast, pericyte, and endothelial cell uptake. • Early LNP uptake is localized to the epicardial region but diminishes at later timepoints, coinciding with the emergence of scar-forming cells in ischemic areas.
Harper et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Ischemia-reperfusion injury. mRNA-LNPs encoding Cre recombinase was evaluated on Cellular tropism and uptake of mRNA-LNPs. Intravenous mRNA-LNPs administered 1 hour post-ischemia-reperfusion injury predominantly targeted myeloid cells, while delayed administration at 3 days shifted uptake towards fibroblasts.
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