Huimin
Kong
a,
Ke
Yi
a,
Chunxiong
Zheng
a,
Yeh-Hsing
Lao
b,
Huicong
Zhou
c,
Hon Fai
Chan
d,
Haixia
Wang
a,
Yu
Tao
*a and
Mingqiang
Li
*ae
aLaboratory of Biomaterials and Translational Medicine, Center for Nanomedicine, The Third Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510630, China. E-mail: taoy28@mail.sysu.edu.cn; limq567@mail.sysu.edu.cn
bDepartment of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14214, USA
cCollege of Science, Changchun Institute of Technology, Changchun 130012, China
dInstitute for Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine, School of Biomedical Science, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong 999077, China
eGuangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Liver Disease Research, Guangzhou 510630, China
First published on 6th June 2022
Membrane fusion, a fundamental biological process of the fusion of the membrane composition between cells, is vital for cell–cell communication and cargo transport between living cells. This fusion interaction achieves the transportation of the inner content to the cellular cytosol as well as the simultaneous blending of foreign substances with the cell membrane. Inspired by this biological process, emerging membrane-fusogenic particles have been developed, opening a new area for bioengineering and biomedical applications. Especially, membrane-fusion-mediated transfer of inner cargoes can bypass endosomal entrapment to maximize the transportation efficiency, emerging as a unique cytoplasmic delivery platform distinct from those depending on conventional endocytosis-based pathways. In addition, the membrane fusion enables cell surface modification through lipid diffusion and mixing, providing a tool for direct cell membrane engineering. In this review, we focus on the development of membrane-fusogenic particles and their up-to-date progress. We briefly introduce the concept of membrane fusion, elaborate inspiring strategies of membrane-fusogenic particles, and highlight the recent advances and the promising applications of membrane-fusogenic particles as a next-generation bioengineering tool. In the end, we conclude with the present challenges and opportunities, providing insights in the future research of membrane-fusogenic particles.
Inspired by this natural membrane-fusion mechanism, material/chemical scientists have recently developed artificial membrane-fusion systems, mainly particles, to manipulate cell behaviors for broad bioengineering and biomedical applications. With rational and elaborate designs, these emerging systems can perform a biomimetic membrane-fusion process, rapidly fusing with the targeted cellular plasma membrane to transport the inner content to the cellular cytosol as well as simultaneously blending foreign substances with the cell membrane. In particular, membrane-fusion-mediated transfer of inner cargoes can bypass endosomal entrapment to maximize the transportation efficiency, emerging as a unique cytoplasmic delivery platform distinct from those depending on traditional endocytosis-based pathways.4 Furthermore, this could be a cell membrane engineering approach, as the membrane fusion would allow the lipid diffusion and mixing between particles and cells. Based on these features, membrane fusion-based particles have been advanced into various applications, particularly efficient drug/gene delivery and novel cell engineering.
In this review, we first commence with an overview of the natural membrane fusion processes and their occurring mechanism, which inspires the development of membrane-fusogenic particles for available biomedical applications (Fig. 1). Next, we highlight and give a detailed summary of the most recent advancements in strategies to induce fusion-based reactions as follows: (1) particle-cell surface modification to drive fusion; (2) virus-mimetic membrane fusion; (3) receptor-mediated membrane fusion; (4) natural cell membrane-fusion; (5) liposome/lipid-based membrane fusion; and (6) polymer-based membrane fusion. Furthermore, we share our prospects on these emerging membrane-fusogenic particles for various biomedical applications, mainly consisting of cargo delivery and membrane engineering. At the end, we highlight the opportunities and challenges of these emerging membrane-fusogenic particles, followed by summarizing current attempts and future potentials to develop the next-generation tools of membrane fusion.
For the mechanism and process, there have been studies identifying that the biological fusion proceeds by an ordered sequence of steps, which can be embodied as a “kiss-and-run” strategy.1–3,5 The prime step is the aggregation between the membranes that are likely to close together and fuse. In this step, the highly specified fusogenic transmembrane proteins play a direct role in executing the fusion command.1 Next, the trigger of appropriate physical conditions and interactions enables two membranes to perform proximity of their lipid bilayers, accelerating further membrane attachment. Then, the local disruption hits the contacted cell membranes with transient destabilization to open the fusion pore.6 The last step is the membrane merging of mixed components in lipid layers, which can accompany the transfer of inner substances. Importantly, this membrane-fusion effect greatly impacts the biological conditions, deserving further studies from more precise scrutiny for the related delivery route and concomitant information exchange.
To date, there are generally two types of cellular uptake routes, including endocytosis and non-endocytosis (membrane fusion, direct translocation, intermembrane transfer, and so on).7 Currently, most particle-mediated delivery systems are internalized via endocytosis. However, their efficiency has been greatly criticized by endosomal entrapment and adverse degradation. It should be noticed that in the unique intracellular mechanism of membrane fusion, the inner contents are directly released into the cellular cytosol, which can entirely bypass the endocytic pathway. Thus, the cytoplasmic delivery using biomimetic membrane-fusogenic particles is expected to achieve higher efficiency without being trapped in the endo-lysosomes. This utilization is promising to be applied to a wide range of bio-functional and bioactive molecules.
More importantly, membrane-fusogenic particles can be not limited to just serving as carriers of inner cargos but can be also applied for membrane engineering. When the membrane fusion occurs, the merging of lipid bilayers provides access to substance exchange inside the membranes. As a result, functional cargos can be simply inserted into the cell membranes from fusion-based delivery without other complicated steps. Predominantly, this shining feature of the fusion-based strategy can be utilized for membrane editing to attain some specific therapeutic goals, such as intramembranous cargo transfer, exterior and interior membrane engineering, etc. Furthermore, the approach to induce membrane fusion is also potential for membrane engineering, in which more and more clear studies are needed to excavate this field.
Fusogenic strategies | Advantages | Disadvantages | Triggers for fusion | Applications | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dual surface modification to drive fusion | • Easy modification in vitro | • Limited for in vivo applications | Surface modification of complementary (KIAALKE)4 and (EIAALEK)4 peptides to form the coiled-coil structure | Intracellular delivery of fluorescent dyes and DOX | 8 |
• Wide suitability in cell types | • Insufficient engineering efficiency | Intracellular delivery of upconversion nanoparticles and DOX | 10 | ||
Intracellular delivery of cytochrome-c (cytC) in the core of mesoporous silica nanoparticles | 11 | ||||
Surface modification of complementary (KIAALKE)3 and (EIAALEK)3 peptides to form the coiled-coil structure | Improved fusion of both homogeneous cell–cell fusion and heterogeneous cell–cell fusion | 9 | |||
Surface modification of complementary DNA sequences to form the zipper-like structure | Intracellular delivery of protein cargos | 12 | |||
Controlling specific vesicle fusion for parallel biological reactions | 13 | ||||
Virus-mimetic membrane fusion | Good fusion efficiency | • Insufficient delivery efficiency in vivo | Surface modification of VSVG fusogen to facilitate virus-like fusion | Delivering functional membrane proteins into the plasma membrane | 14 |
• Absent tissue or cellular specificity | Membrane engineering with pathogen-associated molecular pattern molecules | 15 | |||
Membrane engineering of N3 groups for selective tumor labeling | 16 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 RNPs | 17 | ||||
Surface modification of HA fusogen to facilitate virus-like fusion | Intracellular delivery of mRNA in the core of PLGA | 18 | |||
Receptor-mediated membrane fusion | • Reliable safety | Few in vivo employments | Surface expression of full-length monoclonal antibodies to facilitate fusion | Intracellular delivery of DOX and antibody-dependent immunotherapy | 19 |
• Good delivery targeting ability | |||||
Surface modification of ICAM1 antibodies to induce tumor-specific fusion | Intracellular delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 plasmids in the core of alginate hydrogel | 20 | |||
Natural cell membrane-derived fusion | • Reliable safety | • Insufficient delivery efficiency | Coating of cell-derived membranes with natural membranous fusogens to drive fusion | Intracellular delivery of DOX and poly(ADPribose) in the core of mesoporous silica nanoparticles | 21 |
• Good biocompatibility | • Costing | ||||
• Complicate production | Natural cell-secreted exosomes and vesicles with fusogen proteins to initiate fusion | Membrane engineering with HER2 for enhanced anti-HER2 therapy | 22 | ||
Intracellular delivery of protein cargos | 23 | ||||
Liposome/lipid-induced fusion | Flexibility | Concerns of serum stability | Appropriate lipid components to mimic the regulators to induce non-physiological fusion | Intracellular delivery of the TRAIL gene | 24 |
Intracellular delivery of USP22 shRNA and sorafenib delivery into the plasma membrane | 25 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of Irf5 siRNA | 26 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of REV3L siRNA and PI3K-γ siRNA | 27 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of microRNA-21 | 28 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of microRNA1, 133, 208, and 499 | 29 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of anti-S100A4 antibody and DOX | 30 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of DOX | 31 | ||||
Delivering photosensitizers into the plasma membrane | 32 and 33 | ||||
Intracellular delivery of VEGF siRNA and DiR into the plasma membrane | 34 | ||||
Membrane engineering on both the external and internal sides | 35 | ||||
Polymer-mediated fusion | Flexibility | Needing optimizations | Rationally-designed polymeric structure to induce fusion-like behaviors | Intracellular delivery of DNA | 36 |
Fig. 3 Strategies of particle-cell dual modification to facilitate membrane attachment and induce fusion. (A) Developed lipopeptides for membrane fusion. The coiled-coil structure formed by the complementary lipopeptides can induce fusion, which was verified by confocal analysis of PI delivery mediated by this coiled-coil-triggered fusion. Scale bar, 25 μm. Reproduced with permission under an ACS AuthorChoice License (Creative Commons License).8 Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society. (B) DNA hybridization with complementary oligonucleotides to induce fusion and thus achieve parallel biological reactions. Scale bar, 10 μm. Reproduced with permission.13 Copyright 2019, Wiley-VCH. |
This improved delivery system directly released therapeutic cargos in the cytoplasm, resulting in nearly 50% tumor apoptosis in vitro. In total, the hybridization of peptides anchored on dual cell membranes can induce recognition and membrane attachment, which promotes the fusion with specific cell membranes.
Besides these peptide-based molecules, another dual-surface modification strategy based on DNA hybridization has been applied to trigger artificial membrane integration. For example, Sun et al. designed DNA–lipid hybrids for surface modification to perform targeted and programmable fusion with cellular plasma membranes.12 They found that the hybridization of 3′ cholesterol-functionalized single-stranded DNA and the complementary 5′ cholesterol-functionalized single-stranded DNA modified on cell membranes and liposomes respectively could form a zipper-like structure to achieve membrane tethering and facilitate fusion. The cellular uptake results also showed that the protein delivery using these DNA–lipid hybrids was dependent on the fusion pathway, not the endocytosis pathway. Recently, Kamat and coworkers reported complementary DNA oligonucleotides to induce membrane attachment and facilitate fusion between vesicles (Fig. 3(B)).13 They utilized diverse sets of DNA oligonucleotides to control membrane fusion between specific vesicle populations for parallel biological reactions. Such DNA-mediated orthogonal vesicle fusion can mediate content mixing to induce cell-free protein synthesis, expanding the potential of vesicle-based materials.
The strategy of dual-surface modification of fusion-regulatory molecules on both particles and cell membranes is one of the earliest inspiring ideas for membrane fusion from nature. However, the dual modification on cell–cell or liposome–cell surfaces for artificial membrane fusion is limited for in vivo applications due to the difficulty of in vivo modification. Additionally, with these dual-modification strategies it is still hard to engineer the targeted cells with sufficient efficiency, and requires further improvement.
Fig. 4 Strategies of virus-mimetic fusion. (A) VSVG-expressed fusogenic exosomes to deliver target membrane proteins into the plasma membrane. Here is the schematic illustration of fusogenic exosomes mediated by viral fusogens and confocal images showing the localization of the exosomes (CD63-GFP), the plasma membrane (PM-RFP), and early endosomes (EE-RFP). Scale bars, 10 μm. Reproduced with permission.14 Copyright 2017, Wiley-VCH. (B) VSVG-expressed fusogenic exosomes to achieve tumor xenogenization. Here is the confocal analysis showing the fusion at pH 6.8 and a schematic summary of the VSVG-mediated tumor xenogenization strategy. Scale bar, 50 μm. Reproduced with permission under a Creative Commons CC BY-NC License.15 Copyright 2020, American Association for the Advancement of Science. |
These VSVG/HA-engineered fusogenic exosomes and vesicles have also been developed as platforms for intracellular delivery of the inner therapeutic agents. For example, Montagna et al. reported a VSVG-decorated vesicle carrying CRISPR/Cas9 ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) with high gene editing efficiency via fusion-based transport.17 With the VSVG modification on membranes and encapsulation of RNP cargos inside, this vesicle-based delivery system exhibited membrane fusion for direct cytosol release of inner contents, achieving effective gene editing in pluripotent stem cells and cardiomyocytes. Recently, Park et al. designed an HA-displayed cell membrane-coated nanoparticle for the membrane-fusion-mediated cytosolic delivery of mRNA.18 This nanoparticle was formulated by coating an HA-expressed cell membrane on the poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) cores carrying mRNA. Through HA-mediated membrane fusion with tumor cells in the acidic environment, these developed virus-mimicking particles successfully transfected model mRNA payloads (EGFP and Cypridina luciferase) both in vitro and in vivo.
It is an elegant strategy to utilize the existing transmembrane viral fusion proteins in particle construction to induce the events of viral fusion. However, two large challenges pertain to the in vivo delivery efficiency and the absence of tissue or cellular specificity. It is also worrying whether the introduction of foreign viral fusogens would induce undesired immune responses.
Fig. 5 The strategy of receptor-mediated fusion via tumor-specific antibody-expressed nanovesicles (VAs). (A) Schematic illustration of bioengineering VAs for anti-tumor combination therapy. (B) Antibody-mediated fusion verified by confocal images. Scale bar, 10 μm. (C) ADCC-mediated immunotherapy induced by KM3994-VAs with the measurements of cell toxicity, NK activation (granzyme B), and proinflammatory cytokine (perforin). PBMC, human peripheral blood mononuclear cell. Reproduced with permission.19 Copyright 2019, Wiley-VCH. |
Fusogenic particles with receptor-mediated membrane fusion have broadened the range of biomedical applications, being safer than the virus-mimetic membrane fusion that is derived from infectious viruses. Besides, the rational receptor modifications of particles can not only possess the ability for efficient membrane fusion but also enhance the targeting ability, which is the key point for further in vivo applications.
Fig. 6 The strategy of natural cell membrane-derived fusion that is mediated by the coating of cancer cell membranes. (A) Schematic illustration of CCM@LM to induce fusion-based delivery for enhanced cancer chemotherapy. (B) Confocal analysis of the cellular uptake of inhibition treatments and rhodamine-B-loaded CCM (DiO). Scale bar, 10 μm. (C) Tumor targeting assay of different nanoparticles after 24 hour injection. Reproduced with permission.21 Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society. |
Similarly, the endogenous cell-secreted exosomes and vesicles that are associated with intercellular communication and manipulation of biological behaviors by shuttling genetic information and proteins or other biomacromolecules to exchange information and give certain orders,38–40 for which they have the potential to be biocompatible delivery systems and regulators for interesting biological behaviors. Interestingly, exosomes have been demonstrated with potential cellular uptake via direct membrane fusion with the plasma membrane.23,41,42 Both exosomes and vesicles derived from natural cells have been proven with abundant fusogenic proteins that can activate binding and initiate fusion in the active site.2 For example, Quinn et al. reported an extracellular vesicle derived from human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-overexpressed BT-474 cells that could fuse with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) to transfer sufficient HER2 on their surfaces as anti-HER2 targeting domains.22 Combined with anti-HER2 antibody-conjugated paclitaxel-loaded liposomes, this extracellular vesicle-based anchoring strategy greatly improved their therapeutic efficacy both in vitro and in vivo. Despite the promise of natural exosomes and vesicles as membrane fusion-based delivery tools, their cargo-loading rate and efficiency, especially for biomacromolecules, are really limited. This is because traditional loading methods, such as electroporation, are dependent on the passive loading of biomacromolecules into isolated exosomes or vesicles. To optimize this, Yim et al. developed an active protein-loading method in exosomes via optically-reversible protein–protein interaction for more effective delivery of proteins into the cytoplasm.23 They designed two fusion proteins including a cargo protein fused with a photoreceptor cryptochrome 2 (CRY2) and a protein conjugate of CRY-interacting basic-helix-loophelix 1 (CIB1) protein with an exosome-associated tetraspanin protein CD9. After transduction in the exosome-producing cells, these two proteins will bind together under blue light illumination due to the binding of CRY2 with CIB1, connecting the cargo proteins with CD9. With the assistance of CD9 tetraspanin proteins, the cargoes were actively introduced into the exosomes efficiently. Exosomes generated using these optically-regulated protein–protein interactions could achieve a more efficient intracellular delivery of cargo proteins, like mCherry, Bax, super-repressor IκB protein, and Cre enzyme, into the target cells via membrane fusion in vitro, and into brain parenchymal cells in vivo.
Despite the insufficient efficiency, natural cell membrane-derived membrane fusion has the excellent advantage of good biocompatibility for biosafety since this manner of membrane fusion might be the most similar process to the biological one. However, the preparation of these systems might have a considerable cost outlay and require a complex and laborious procedure, which hinders further progress. An improved method of natural cell membrane-derived fusion, such as combining with the viral-mimetic or receptor-mediated membrane-fusion strategies, will have great potential for in vivo medicine and clinical translation.
Besides, Kim's group developed another lipid-based fusion system: porous silicon particle shedding with fusogenic liposomes to introduce an oligonucleotide payload into the cytosol via membrane fusion.26 This fusogenic lipid layer was constructed by the composites of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC), 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (DOTAP), and DSPE-PEG with a specific ratio. The large portion of DMPC components endows the lipid layer with a moderately low phase transition point near room temperature, maintaining a fluidity similar to cell membranes. The positive charged DOTAP allows the liposome to interact with cell membranes via electrostatic absorption. Meanwhile, PEG or an equivalent dehydrating agent presented in the lipid formulation excludes the disturbance to lipid–membrane interaction by other molecules in the environment. By anchoring appropriate target motifs on surfaces and loading cargoes in the silicon cores, this established fusogenic liposome could be utilized to deliver a variety of molecules to desirable sites. For example, they established a fusogenic liposome with the decoration of macrophage-homing peptides and the encapsulation of oligonucleotide payloads in the core of porous silicon particles. Benefiting from the fusogenic and macrophage-targeting coating, the system was proved to deliver siRNAs through membrane fusion but not endocytosis, significantly knock-downing the proinflammatory macrophage marker Irf5 to restart the clearance ability of macrophages. Such fusogenic liposome-based reprogramming of macrophages could achieve an efficient elimination of Staphyloccocus aureus pneumonia in mouse models. More recently, they also improved the formula of this type of fusogenic lipid coating (DMPC:DOTAP:DSPE-PEG) for siRNA delivery for cancer therapy (Fig. 7(A)).27 To confirm the membrane fusion, the fusogenic nanoparticles and non-fusogenic nanoparticles were used to determine cellular uptake with endocytosis inhibition (Fig. 7(B)) and intracellular trafficking (Fig. 7(C)). Then, they applied the optimized fusogenic particles modified with tumor cell-targeting iRGD and tumor-associated macrophage (TAM)-targeting Lyp-1 peptide to deliver REV3L siRNA and PI3K-γ siRNA, to the cancer cell and TAM, respectively (Fig. 7(D)). The results indicated that this therapy showed efficient REV3L silence and TAM reprogramming, achieving significant anti-cancer effects (Fig. 7(E)).
Fig. 7 The strategy of designing liposomes with optimized lipid components and ratios to induce membrane fusion. (A) Schematic illustration of optimized fusogenic nanoparticles (FNPs) to achieve fusion with the cellular plasma membrane. (B) Cellular uptake of DiI-loaded FNPs and non-fusogenic nanoparticles (NNPs) in CAOV-3 cells that were pre-treated with different endocytosis inhibitors. (C) Confocal analysis of CAOV-3 cells incubated with FNPs and NNPs. FNPs and NNPs were labeled with DiO (green) in the lipid shell. Scale bar, 5 μm. (D) Schematic showing C-FNPs and T-FNPs for gene silence in cancer chemotherapy. (E) The chemosensitivity analysis in CAOV-3 cancer cells. Reproduced with permission.27 Copyright 2019, Wiley-VCH. |
Furthermore, this type of fusogenic liposome (DMPC/DOTAP/DSPE-PEG) was also reported to be hybridized with natural cell membranes or membrane proteins for enhanced targeting of some specific lesions. Ge's team modified these membrane-fusogenic liposomes with additional hybridization of platelet cell membranes to deliver the anti-inflammatory microRNA-21 for myocardial remodeling in cardiac healing.28 Owing to the aggregation of circulating platelet-monocytes in post-myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury, these platelet cell membrane-integrated fusogenic liposomes could specifically accumulate in inflammatory monocytes in blood circulation, efficiently delivering microRNA-21 speedily into their cytoplasm for improved myocardial remodeling. Likewise, this group hybridized neutrophil-derived membrane proteins on fusogenic liposome surfaces to mimic the homing ability of neutrophils to the injured heart after myocardial infarction.29 The neutrophil-modified fusogenic liposomes could achieve specificity through the interaction with chemokine ligands expressed on injured endothelium and myocardium. With this specific targeting ability, the fusogenic liposomes could precisely deliver a combination of microRNAs (microRNA1, 133, 208, and 499) to cardiac fibroblasts via a membrane-fusion manner, resulting in effective cardiac reprogramming with cardiac function recovery and alleviative fibrosis in vivo.
Overall, the similar structure of lipid bilayers and appropriate preparations of selective lipid materials are significant for these flexible fusion-based systems with profound functional optimizations. Besides, lipid or liposomal particle also possess the advantages of broad cargo-loading capacity and feasible surface modification. Therefore, lipid/liposome membrane-fusogenic particles can be designed and engineered to fuse with the targeted cell membrane and applied to achieve quick and efficient drug delivery and membrane engineering. Currently, with the advantages of great loading capacity, the developing fusogenic lipid particles have been applied to deliver therapeutic nucleus acids, proteins, and chemical drugs, bypassing the endocytosis-endosome pathway to directly release cargos into the cytoplasm. Hence, these fusion-based delivery systems are promising to improve drug efficiency to a higher extent for a more effective efficacy. Furthermore, some studies have reported that fusogenic liposomes could load hydrophobic agents in the lipid bilayers, fusing with the plasma membrane to achieve cargo transfer to cell membranes for labelling or therapeutic goals. Therefore, fine-tuning liposomes and lipid-based particles to induce membrane fusion are worth further exploration, in which decent lipid formulation properties and specific additions are vital for further improvements in the stability and delivery efficiency.
Fig. 8 The strategy of specially designed polymer nanocarriers with pore-mediated fusion transport. (A) Schematic illustration of γPGA/L4/DNA to induce a fusion pore for cargo direct injection into the cells. (B) The structures of quaternized polymers with different acyl chain lengths. (C) Confocal analysis of γPGA/L4/DNA with the co-localization of L4, γPGA, the plasma membrane, and lysosomes. Scale bar, 25 μm. Reproduced with permission.36 Copyright 2021, Elsevier. |
Polymeric materials have been widely used in particle constructions with great adaptability,44–46 while there is currently a gap in polymer-based fusogenic systems. The aforementioned γPGA/L4/DNA system represents a milestone for promoting the development of polymer-mediated fusion, expanding more possibilities. Promisingly, well-designed polymers have the potential to exploit alternative strategies to accomplish a pore-mediated fusion manner, providing a wider range of opportunities for their use in different biomedical applications with convenient and tunable synthetic processes.
Taking a recent study as an example, Ge's group established a fusogenic system to deliver miRNAs via membrane fusion-based transport to treat fibroblast features (Fig. 10(A)).29 This system showed efficient fusion-mediated gene delivery by avoiding the obstacles of endosome-mediated degradation (Fig. 10(B)). In the mouse models of myocardial damage, the efficient miRNA delivery of this system promoted significant cardiac regeneration (Fig. 10(C)). Besides, Qin's team established a tumor microenvironment-sensitive membrane-fusogenic liposome to transfer both anti-S100A4 antibodies and DOX into the metastatic tumors.30 This system performed fast delivery based on the efficient fusion-like uptake, thereby achieving great synergistic cancer therapy in both 4T1 cells and tumor xenograft mouse models. Moreover, Pitchaimani et al. engineered a natural killer cell membrane-infused fusogenic liposome (NKsome) for targeted drug delivery directly into the cytoplasm to treat tumors.31 The results indicated that these engineered NKsomes retained great biocompatibility, fusogenic characteristics, and NK cell membrane-associated specific proteins for tumor targeting efficiency. Thus, the DOX-loaded NKsomes achieved effective therapeutic activity for cooperative drug delivery both in vitro and in MCF-7 tumor cell-bearing mice. These membrane-fusogenic carriers have been successfully and widely used in the cytoplasmic delivery of various reagents.
Fig. 10 The application of membrane fusion-based transport for inner cargo delivery directly into the cytoplasm, avoiding endosome-induced degradation. (A) Schematic illustration of fusogenic nanoparticles to deliver miRNAs for cardiac regeneration. (B) Confocal analysis of the colocation of MSNs, lipids, endosomes, and miRNAs. Scale bar, 50 μm.(C) Representative images of myocardium after different treatments. Reproduced with permission.29 Copyright 2021, Elsevier. |
The developing membrane-fusogenic particles acting as nanocarriers can perform in an effective manner fusion with the targeted cellular plasma membrane, smoothly and speedily delivering the inner cargos into the cytosol while bypassing endocytosis. More than that, membrane-fusogenic nanocarriers are tolerant to a wide range of cargos. This delivery strategy has the prominent advantage of low degradation risk but high efficiency, for which these fusogenic nanocarriers have the potential for diverse clinical translations.
For example, the exosome-based fusogenic delivery with “membrane editing” developed by Kim et al. achieved the transfer of biomedical membrane proteins into the targeted cell membranes.14
By honoring VSVG fusogen proteins and interested proteins on the fusogenic exosomes, the cargoes could be successfully transported into the plasma membrane via the fusion pathway both in vitro and in vivo. This study offers a novel delivery strategy to insert bioactive membrane proteins in cell membranes, providing a reliable solution to membrane protein defects in human disorders. Similarly, Park and coworkers developed membrane-fusogenic liposomes for the delivery of photosensitizers into plasma membrane.32 The photosensitizers, ZnPc, were loaded inside the lipid layer of membrane-fusogenic liposomes, which were demonstrated to be inserted into the plasma membrane via the fusion reactions. The in vitro results indicated that this selective membrane location of ZnPc with irradiation could rapidly disrupt cellular membranes and effectively perform photodynamic therapy. Additionally, they also reported a liposome-mediated membrane vesicle engineering strategy via the selective delivery of hydrophobic compounds to the tumor cell plasma membranes (Fig. 11(A)).33 The developed membrane-fusogenic liposomes loaded with hydrophobic cargos could be incorporated into recipient cell membrane and subsequently transported to secreted vesicles for deep penetration (Fig. 11(B) and (C)). This delivery strategy of photosensitizers significantly enhanced the therapeutic effects in both spheroids and in vivo tumors. More recently, Xue's group reported worm-like nanocell mimics constructed by coating erythrocyte membranes on a worm-like nanoparticle for in situ tumor cell engineering via membrane fusion.34 With targeted membrane fusion, 1,1′-dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethyl indotricarbocyanine iodide (DiR) inside the lipid bilayers of the nanocell mimics could be inserted into the plasma membranes of primary and circulating tumor cells (CTCs). Then the engineered cells could secrete extracellular vesicles to enhance the tumor penetration as well as capture and cluster homologous CTCs, inducing NIR-mediated photothermal therapy in both primary tumors and metastatic sites. The in vivo results illustrated that the worm-like nanocell mimics performed excellent penetration, achieving great anti-tumor and anti-metastasis efficacy.
Fig. 11 The application of membrane fusion-based delivery into the cellular plasma membranes. (A) Schematic illustration of MFL-delivered hydrophilic and hydrophobic compounds into the membrane vesicles and adjacent cells. (B) Confocal analysis of cells incubated with fusogenic and non-fusogenic liposomes carrying the ZnPc photosensitizer (red). Scale bar, 5 μm. (C) Confocal microscopic images of tumor spheroids treated with ZnPc-loaded liposomes and the analysis of preservation and cell viability. Scale bar, 200 μm. Reproduced with permission.33 Copyright 2015, American Chemical Society. |
Utilizing membrane-fusogenic nanocarriers for delivery into plasma membrane is a potential direction for biomedical applications. Researchers have exploited these nanocarriers for the transport of membrane proteins and hydrophobic photosensitizers to facilitate the therapeutic benefits. Yet, there is room for further development in this membrane fusion-based membrane engineering.
Fig. 12 The application of membrane fusion-based transport for engineering external and internal sides of the plasma membrane. (A) Schematic illustration of DNA-anchored fusogenic nanoparticles fusing with cells on both the outer face and inner face. (B) Confocal analysis of verifying external and the internal membrane engineering mediated by the membrane fusion via Fuso-SNA. Reproduced with permission.35 Copyright 2022, Wiley-VCH. |
Taking advantage of membrane fusion for cell membrane engineering is such a potential approach, which can be applied in multiple significant fields. In this way, the engineering of both outer-membrane and inner-membrane can be achieved, which has great potential for theranostics.
Since membrane-fusogenic particles are promising tools for advanced medicine, strategies for combating the current challenges are on the way. Firstly, for the improvement of membrane-fusogenic particles, the system should be carefully designed with the control of the composition, size, surface charge, shape, and other physicochemical properties to meet the goal with membrane fusion-based interactions.47,54–56 The insightful attempts of fusogenic liposomes and polymers with exclusive constructions have encouraged the expansion of the library of membrane-fusogenic particles from advanced materials with easier tunability and variability. Secondly, the efficiency of fusion reactions is crucial to biomedical applications, and there is considerable room to enhance the current efficiency. On the premise of ensuring safety, particles to trigger a more efficient membrane fusion are capable of dramatically increasing the potential for therapeutics. Thirdly, the strategies, such as ligand-mediated functionalization and tissue/cell-specific peptide decoration, are mostly recommended to enhance the targeting ability and specificity, especially for the in vivo application.57–61
To promote the improvement of membrane-fusogenic systems, more precise and convincing approaches are expected to be established to evaluate the fusion manner. Currently, methods to verify the membrane fusion manner are limited to the use of endocytosis/fusion inhibitors and endosome trackers to determine the in vitro cellular uptake.19,27,53 However, these inhibitors are still difficult to apply for in vivo verification, while endosome trackers lack convincing statistical results. The delivery process of membrane fusion, especially the intracellular internalization and subsequent route, requires more detailed data to be verified. Using methods like dynamic monitoring may give a deeper analysis of the fusion events.
Membrane fusion-based delivery technologies would hold great prospects in a material/medical laboratory and clinical applications for personalized cell behaviors. There might be the greatest concern whether membrane-fusogenic particles can be still practical in the complicated physical environment. Nevertheless, as developing technology evolves to meet the desires, there is the potential that advanced membrane-fusogenic particles can have enormous impacts in various fields.
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