| Literature DB >> 19075740 |
Abstract
Cellular uptake of therapeutic oligonucleotides and subsequent intracellular trafficking to their target sites represents the major technical hurdle for the biological effectiveness of these potential drugs. Accordingly, laboratories worldwide focus on the development of suitable delivery systems. Among the different available non-viral systems like cationic polymers, cationic liposomes and polymeric nanoparticles, cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) represent an attractive concept to bypass the problem of poor membrane permeability of these charged macromolecules. While uptake per se in most cases does not represent the main obstacle of nucleic acid delivery in vitro, it becomes increasingly apparent that intracellular trafficking is the bottleneck. As a consequence, in order to optimize a given delivery system, a side-by-side analysis of nucleic acid cargo internalized and the corresponding biological effect is required to determine the overall efficacy. In this review, we will concentrate on peptide-mediated delivery of siRNAs and steric block oligonucleotides and discuss different methods for quantitative assessment of the amount of cargo taken up and how to correlate those numbers with biological effects by applying easy to handle reporter systems. To illustrate current limitations of non-viral nucleic acid delivery systems, we present own data as an example and discuss options of how to enhance trafficking of molecules entrapped in cellular compartments.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19075740 PMCID: PMC2778081 DOI: 10.2174/138161208786898806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Pharm Des ISSN: 1381-6128 Impact factor: 3.116
Sequences of Selected “Classical” CPPs
| Peptide | Sequence | References |
|---|---|---|
| Tat48-60 | GRKKRRQRRRPPQ | [ |
| penetratin (Antp43-58) | RQIKIWFQNRRMKWKK | [ |
| transportan | GWTLNSAGYLLGKINLKALAALAKKIL | [ |
| TP10 | AGYLLGKINLKALAALAKKIL | [ |
| Oligoarginine (R8) | RRRRRRRR | [ |
| MAP | KLALKLALKALKAALKLA | [ |
| MPG | GALFLGFLGAAGSTMGAWSQPKKKRKV | [ |
| MPGα | GALFLAFLAAALSLMGLWSQPKKKRKV | [ |
Examples for Peptide-Mediated Delivery of siRNA
| CPP/Delivery System | Mode of Linkage | Target | Cell Line | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tat47-57, Tat-derived oligocarbamate) | c | EGFP, CDK9 | HeLa | [ |
| penetratin, transportan | c | luciferase, GFP | Cos-7, C166, EOMA, CHO-AA8 | [ |
| penetratin | c | Cu-ZN SOD-1, Caspase-3/-8/-9 | primary rat hippocampal or sympathetic neurons | [ |
| Tat48–60, penetratin | c | p38 MAP kinase | L929 (mouse fibroblasts), mouse lung (intratracheal) | [ |
| MPG, MPGΔNLS | n-c | luciferase, GAPDH | HeLa, Cos-7, HS-68 | [ |
| H3K8b, H3K8b(+RGD) | n-c | β-Gal, luciferase | SVR-bag4, MDA-MB-435, C6 | [ |
| RVG-9R | n-c | GFP, Cu-ZN SOD-1, JEV | HeLa, Neuro2a, mouse brain (intravenously) | [ |
| POD | n-c | EGFP | HER 911 | [ |
| Chol-R9 | n-c | VEGF | CT-26, mouse (intratumoral) | [ |
| EB1, MPGΔNLS,bPrPp | n-c | luciferase | HeLa, HepG2 | [ |
| TatU1A | n-c | EGFP, EGFR | CHO, A431, | [ |
| MPGα | n-c | luciferase | HeLa, ECV 304 | [ |
| rCPP | n-c | EGFP, EF1A | HeLa, H1299 | [ |
| stearyl-R8 | n-c | EGFP, MAP2B | primary rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
| R8-MEND (siRNA/stearyl-R8 core) | n-c | luciferase | HeLa | [ |
c = covalent / n-c = non-covalent.
Examples for Peptide-Mediated Delivery of Steric Block Oligonucleotides
| Oligonucleotide Cargo | CPP/Delivery System | Application | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2’-OMe phosphorothioate RNA | Tat49-60, penetratin | splice correction | [ |
| RNA analogues | Tat48-58, penetratin, R6-penetratin, transportan, R9, R9F2 and further peptides | HIV-1 transactivation | [ |
| PMO | R9F2, Tat peptide, penetratin | splice correction | [ |
| PNA | Tat48-58, penetratin, transportan analogues, R9F2, R6-penetratin | HIV-1 transactivation | [ |
| PMO | (R-Ahx-R)4 | splice correction | [ |
| PNA | R6-penetratin | splice correction | [ |
| PMO | (R-Ahx-R)4AhxB | exon skipping | [ |
| PMO | R8-derivatives containing non-α amino acids | exon skipping | [ |
| PNA | Tat, MSP, AAV6, AAV8 | exon skipping | [ |
Summary of Quantitative Studies Concerning Peptide-Mediated siRNA Uptake
| Mode of Delivery | Molecules Per Cell for Half-Maximal Inhibition |
|---|---|
| LF2000-mediated transfection | ~300 |
| MPGα-mediated transfection | ~10,000 |
| cytoplasmic microinjection | ~12 |
Transfections were performed with 2.1 µM MPGα and 1 nM siRNA or 10 µg/ml LF2000 and 0.02 nM siRNA, i.e. in the range of the IC50 value [55]. Quantification was performed after 24 h according to the liquid hybridization protocol [55]. Molecules per cell were calculated based on the cell number seeded for transfection. For microinjection experiments, molecules per cell were calculated on the basis of the injection volume.
Summary of Quantitative Studies Concerning Peptide-Mediated Steric Block Oligonucleotide Uptake
| Mode of Delivery | Molecules Per Cell for Maximal Splice Correction |
|---|---|
| LF2000-mediated transfection | ~7,000,000 |
| MPGα -mediated transfection | ~70,000,000 |
| nuclear microinjection | ~300,000 |
Transfections were performed with 2.5 µM MPGα or 7 µg/ml LF2000 and 278 nM steric block oligonucleotide, respectively, to achieve maximal splice correction. Quantification was performed after 24 h according to the liquid hybridization protocol ([55] and Laufer et al., manuscript in preparation). Molecules per cell were calculated based on the cell number seeded for transfection. For microinjection experiments, molecules per cell were calculated on the basis of the injection volume.