Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling of mRNA-Encoded Therapeutics: A Multiscale Framework for LNP and Antibody Trafficking in Mice.

Pub. type
Scientific paper
Pub. date
December 23, 2025
Published in
bioRxiv
Authors
Elio Campanile
Elisa Pettinà
Stefano Giampiccolo
Lorena Leonardelli
Luca Marchetti
Link
View on bioRxiv

Abstract

Antibody-based therapeutics have revolutionized disease treatment, and recent advances in messenger RNA (mRNA) technologies have opened new opportunities for their intracellular production. In particular, in vitro–transcribed mRNA encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) enables targeted delivery to specific cells, where it can enable the synthesis of therapeutic antibodies with prolonged half-lives in a cost-effective manner. Despite rapidly growing experimental data, a modeling framework that integrates mRNA delivery, intracellular expression kinetics, and whole-body antibody disposition remains unavailable. To address this gap, we extended a Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic model with a novel multiscale layer describing mRNA trafficking, cellular uptake, translation, and degradation. The integrated model was calibrated and validated using five datasets of mRNA-based cancer therapeutics, demonstrating strong predictive performance for the biodistribution of mRNA-encoded antibodies. The newly introduced mRNA layer, while minimally parameterized, effectively represents complex intracellular and systemic processes, enabling quantitative investigation of antibody biodistribution, optimization of dose scheduling, and providing an initial framework for future exploration of how LNP–mRNA formulation influences delivery and pharma-cokinetics.