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Microfluidic Generation of Exosome-Mimetic Nanoparticles for Scalable Production and Enhanced Therapeutic Efficacy

Authors
 Kim, Jaejeung  ;  Lee, Do Hyun  ;  Seo, Hyunjo  ;  Lee, Hyun-Jin  ;  Kim, Geonha  ;  Nie, Cheng  ;  Hong, Yongpyo  ;  Yoon, Yeo-Jun  ;  Lim, Jae-Yol  ;  Park, Seong Jun  ;  Yang, Ji Yeong  ;  Choi, Seoyeon  ;  Park, Sunyoung  ;  Jung, Hyo-Il 
Citation
 SMALL, Vol.42, 2025-10 
Article Number
 e06162 
Journal Title
SMALL
ISSN
 1613-6810 
Issue Date
2025-10
MeSH
Animals ; Exosomes* / chemistry ; Exosomes* / metabolism ; Humans ; MicroRNAs / metabolism ; Microfluidics* / methods ; Nanoparticles* / chemistry ; Nanoparticles* / ultrastructure
Keywords
biomimetic nanocarriers ; exosomes ; micromixers ; nucleic acid delivery ; salivary gland stem cells
Abstract
Exosomes are nanoscale lipid-bilayer vesicles that mediate intercellular communication by delivering bioactive molecules such as nucleic acids and proteins. Among them, exosomes derived from salivary gland epithelial stem cells (sgESC-Exos) exhibit antifibrotic effects in salivary gland models through the delivery of antifibrotic microRNAs, such as miR-1290 and miR-3162. However, their clinical translation is hindered by low production yield and particle heterogeneity. To address these challenges, exosome-mimetic nanoparticles (ENPs) are developed that mimic the lipid composition and therapeutic cargoes of sgESC-Exos using a microfluidic chip integrated with a reverse-Tesla structured micromixer. The microfluidic platform facilitates efficient mixing and self-assembly of lipid and aqueous phases, resulting in uniform ENPs with effective encapsulation of nucleic acids. The resulting ENPs exhibit physicochemical properties similar to exosomes, including comparable size distribution and structural features. Moreover, they demonstrate efficient encapsulation of exosomal miRNAs and more uniform physicochemical properties than sgESC-Exos, contributed to enhanced therapeutic efficacy, with approximate to 21-fold higher cellular uptake and two-fold faster wound closure rate. These findings highlight the potential of microfluidics-based bottom-up synthesis as a robust platform for exosome-inspired nanomedicine, addressing key limitations of exosomes and paving the way for clinical translation.
Full Text
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/smll.202506162
DOI
10.1002/smll.202506162
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology (이비인후과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Yoon, Yeo-Jun(윤여준)
Lim, Jae Yol(임재열) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9757-6414
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/208082
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