Publication | Open Access
Customizable virus-like particles deliver CRISPR–Cas9 ribonucleoprotein for effective ocular neovascular and Huntington’s disease gene therapy
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Citations
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References
2025
Year
Disease Gene TherapyEngineeringIn Vivo Gene TherapyVivo Crispr GeneMolecular BiologyCrispr DeliveryGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringTherapeuticsVivo Crispr TherapeuticsGenome EngineeringCrisprOphthalmologyCell BiologyGene TherapiesCustomizable Virus-like ParticlesSynthetic BiologyGenetic EngineeringGene EditingGene VectorCrispr–cas9 RibonucleoproteinMedicineGenome Editing
In vivo CRISPR gene editing holds enormous potential for various diseases. Ideally, CRISPR delivery should be cell type-specific and time-restricted for optimal efficacy and safety, but customizable methods are lacking. Here we develop a cell-tropism programmable CRISPR-Cas9 ribonucleoprotein delivery system (RIDE) based on virus-like particles. The efficiency of RIDE was comparable to that of adeno-associated virus and lentiviral vectors and higher than lipid nanoparticles. RIDE could be readily reprogrammed to target dendritic cells, T cells and neurons, and significantly ameliorated the disease symptoms in both ocular neovascular and Huntington's disease models via cell-specific gene editing. In addition, RIDE could efficiently edit the huntingtin gene in patients' induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons and was tolerated in non-human primates. This study is expected to facilitate the development of in vivo CRISPR therapeutics.
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