Abstract

Although mRNA delivery technology is very promising, problems in safety and transport arise due to the intrinsically low thermodynamic stability of the current mRNA carriers. Considering that mRNAs are filamentous and a nanotube is one of the most thermodynamically stable shapes among nanoassemblies, a nanotube is one of the most stable supramolecular structures that can be assembled with mRNA. Here, we develop a nanotube-shaped filamentous mRNA delivery platform that shows exceptionally high thermodynamic stability. The key to the development of the mRNA nanotube is the design of self-adjusting supramolecular building blocks (SABs) that have two disparate properties, i.e., dynamic property and stiffness, in a single molecule. The counterbalance of the dynamic property and stiffness in SABs enables the coating of mRNA by winding its way through the flexible and irregular mRNA chain via cooperative interactions. SAB nanotubes with targeting ligands installed show a high uptake efficiency in mammalian cells and controllable gene expression behavior. Thus, the mRNA nanotube provides an enabling technology toward the development of safe and stable mRNA vaccines and therapeutics.

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