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Exosome-like nanovesicles from acerola for CRISPR-Cas9 ribonucleoprotein delivery to the central nervous system.

Nagamatsu Y, Umezu T, Hong T, Niijima T, Ohno SI

Medicinal Plants

The acerola cherry — a tropical fruit you might find at a Latin market or growing in a warm-climate container garden — turns out to produce microscopic membrane bubbles that can slip past the brain's tightest security checkpoint, hinting that plants may be quietly supplying medicine's next toolkit.

Acerola, a small tropical fruit famous for its sky-high vitamin C content, releases tiny natural particles that scientists scooped up and loaded with a gene-editing tool. When sprayed into the nose of mice, those particles traveled to the brain and successfully rewrote a stretch of DNA tied to ALS. The finding opens a window onto how plants might serve as living factories for brain medicines that no synthetic nanoparticle has safely matched yet.

Key Findings

1

Acerola-derived nanoparticles formed stable complexes with CRISPR-Cas9 protein and guide RNA without breaking down under storage conditions.

2

Attaching a GLP2 peptide tag to the plant-particle complexes improved delivery selectivity to neurons expressing GLP2 receptors compared to untagged particles.

3

Intranasal administration in live animals achieved confirmed genome editing of the C9orf72 mutation site in the brain, the most common genetic cause of familial ALS.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists harvested tiny bubble-like particles naturally produced by the acerola fruit and used them to deliver CRISPR gene-editing tools into the brains of living animals via a nose spray. The plant-derived particles successfully edited a gene linked to ALS and frontotemporal dementia, suggesting a noninvasive route around the brain's toughest biological barrier.

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Abstract Preview

An aberrant six-base repeat in intron 1 of C9orf72 is the most frequent cause of solitary and familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia. This mutation is a potential target...

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hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Acerola, Barbados Cherry medicinal-plants, plant-derived-nanoparticles, crispr +2 more 5 related articles

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