Drugs made of mRNA have the potential to transform medicine—if only they could get into cells in one piece. Now, University of Connecticut researchers have shown that packaging mRNA like a virus could smuggle it into cells safely, opening up a new way to deliver mRNA into cells to treat diseases such as cancer. Their research is published in the journal ACS Nano.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) is a single strand of ribonucleic acids that tells the protein-making machinery inside cells what to do. Usually RNA strands are made using the DNA blueprints inside a cell’s central nucleus, and then travel out to the protein production areas. Getting a medicinal mRNA into a cell from outside, though, is another matter. Most things trying to enter a cell have to pass through an endosome. An endosome is like a decontamination bubble. Its interior becomes acidic, which activates enzymes that chew up anything potentially dangerous—like foreign RNA.
But many viruses have evolved to hijack this system.









