Electro-mechanical transfection for non-viral primary immune cell engineering
Sido, J. M.; Hemphill, J. B.; McCormack, R. N.; Beighley, R. D.; Grant, B. F.; Buie, C. R.; Garcia, P. A.
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Non-viral approaches to transfection have emerged a viable option for gene transfer. Electro-mechanical transfection involving use of electric fields coupled with high fluid flow rates is a scalable strategy for cell therapy development and manufacturing. Unlike purely electric field-based or mechanical-based delivery methods, the combined effects result in delivery of genetic material at high efficiencies and low toxicity. This study focuses on delivery of reporter mRNA to show electro-mechanical transfection can be used successfully in human T cells. Rapid optimization of delivery to T cells was observed with efficiency over 90% and viability over 80%. Confirmation of optimized electro-mechanical transfection parameters was assessed in multiple use cases including a 50-fold scale up demonstration. Transcriptome and ontology analysis show that delivery, via electro-mechanical transfection, does not result in gene dysregulation. This study demonstrates that non-viral electro-mechanical transfection is an efficient and scalable method for cell and gene therapy engineering and development. One Sentence SummaryThis study demonstrates that non-viral electro-mechanical transfection is an efficient and scalable method for development of engineered cellular therapies.
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