For over a decade, non-integrating Sendai virus vectors have been the gold standard for induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) reprogramming. However, as the field shifts toward regenerative and precision medicine and large-scale biorepositories, Sendai virus workflow necessitates dedicated viral-clearance testing, specialized manufacturing controls, and heightened regulatory oversight, leading to increased cost. While mRNA-based reprogramming offers a non-viral alternative, traditional mRNA delivery methods like electroporation are often physiologically disruptive. This study evaluates an mRNA-reprogramming platform that delivers lipid nanoparticles (mRNA-LNPs) via receptor-mediated endocytosis. By utilizing both Sendai virus and mRNA-LNP approaches to reprogram PBMCs from the same donor, we established a genetically identical starting point. Results demonstrate that mRNA-LNP-reprogrammed iPSCs maintain genomic integrity, retain the donor KCNH2 c.2398+5G>T variant, and exhibit characteristic colony morphology, pluripotency markers, and trilineage differentiation capacity consistent with the Sendai-reprogrammed counterparts. The mRNA-LNP-reprogrammed iPSCs differentiate into iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes presenting sarcomeric structures and electrophysiological activity, recapitulating a disease-specific phenotype. Notably, the mRNA-LNP workflow reached these milestones in significantly fewer passages than the Sendai virus workflow, markedly shortening timelines and reducing costs. These findings highlight mRNA-LNP reprogramming as a potentially attractive and effective, virus-independent platform to support future regenerative and precision medicine initiatives and scalable biobanking.
DeBose et al. (Fri,) studied this question.