-
Professor Sally-Ann Cryan
News
Gene Therapy Targeting – What role can Nanoparticles play?
Jun 24 2021
“With the success of the COVID-19 vaccines, the potential of gene therapies is becoming apparent and advanced nanoparticle delivery systems are key to enabling their use clinically. We have shown that these nanoparticles have real potential to be a game changer in the delivery of gene therapies -” Sally-Ann Cryan.
A platform that produces polypeptide-based materials as vectors for specific gene therapy cargos has been developed by researchers from RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin. Delivering genetic information into host cells presents a major challenge; Covid-19 vaccines that use mRNA technology, for example, deliver the genetic information in a lipid nanoparticle and the success of the COVID vaccines has established nanoparticles as key to the development of many advanced therapies.
Supported by Science Foundation Ireland, the RCSI research team’s platform is designed around bespoke star-shaped polypeptide nanoparticles as vectors which are, crucially, more flexible and easier to handle than lipids. In pre-clinical work, the material loaded with DNA molecules that promote bones and blood vessels to regrow, were placed in a scaffold that could be implanted into a defect site where the genetic cargo infiltrated host cells. The gene-loaded scaffold accelerated bone tissue regeneration, with a six-fold increase in new bone formation compared to a scaffold alone.
Nanoparticle delivery systems are key
“With the success of the COVID-19 vaccines, the potential of gene therapies is becoming apparent and advanced nanoparticle delivery systems are key to enabling their use clinically. We have shown that these nanoparticles have real potential to be a game changer in the delivery of gene therapies,” said Professor Sally-Ann Cryan, the study’s senior author and Professor of Drug Delivery, RCSI.
“While more testing is needed before these therapies can be used clinically, our platform allows us to design our polypeptides to meet a variety of delivery scenarios and provide tailored solutions to gene delivery challenges,” added Professor Andreas Heise, project collaborator and Professor of Polymer Chemistry, RCSI.
Industry partners sought
“We are developing this patent-protected technology towards commercialisation, with support from an Enterprise Ireland Commercialisation Fund Award and are seeking expressions of interest from industry partners and investors.”
Published in Biomaterials Science.
More information online
Digital Edition
Lab Asia Dec 2025
December 2025
Chromatography Articles- Cutting-edge sample preparation tools help laboratories to stay ahead of the curveMass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy Articles- Unlocking the complexity of metabolomics: Pushi...
View all digital editions
Events
Jan 21 2026 Tokyo, Japan
Jan 28 2026 Tokyo, Japan
Jan 29 2026 New Delhi, India
Feb 07 2026 Boston, MA, USA
Asia Pharma Expo/Asia Lab Expo
Feb 12 2026 Dhaka, Bangladesh



