| Literature DB >> 18041639 |
Tao Chen1, Zhao Wang, Rutao Wang, Tingli Lu, Weijiao Wang.
Abstract
Polyethylenimine (PEI), a cationic polymer, was used to develop a non-viral vector for gene delivery. A simple, reproducible process is described with which to condense plasmid DNA with PEI. When prepared at the optimum charge ratio of 6.3 ( +/- ; PEI:DNA, 5:1 w/w), PEI-DNA complexes were 30-60 nm in diameter and excluded intercalating dyes from the plasmid DNA. The particles were stable for more than one month at 4 degrees C with respect to size and transfection activity. PEI-condensed DNA transfected a broad range of murine and human tumor cell lines (B16, Lewis Lung, SK-OV-3 and LS180) in vitro in the presence of fetal calf serum. Intraperitoneal administration of PEI-condensed DNA resulted in significant gene expression in a human ovarian cancer peritoneal xenograft model.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18041639 DOI: 10.1080/10611860701637974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Target ISSN: 1026-7158 Impact factor: 5.121