| Literature DB >> 20093155 |
Xin Zhao1, Lichen Yin, Jieying Ding, Cui Tang, Shaohua Gu, Chunhua Yin, Yumin Mao.
Abstract
Trimethyl chitosan-cysteine conjugate (TMC-Cys) was evaluated as non-viral gene carriers to combine the advantages of TMC and thiolated chitosan. TMC-Cys with various molecular weights (30, 100, and 200 kDa) and quaternization degrees (15 and 30%) was allowed to form polyelectrolyte nanocomplexes with plasmid encoding enhanced green fluorescence protein (pEGFP), which demonstrated preferable diameters of below 200 nm and zeta potentials of +15 to +20 mV. Cell binding and uptake of TMC-Cys/pEGFP nanocomplexes (TMC-Cys NC) were enhanced 2.4-3.0 and 1.4-3.0 folds, respectively, compared to TMC/pEGFP nanocomplexes (TMC NC). pEGFP could be easily released from TMC-Cys NC at the intracellular glutathione concentration, which promoted its nuclear transport and accumulation. Consequently, TMC-Cys NC showed a 1.4 to 3.2-fold increase in the transfection efficiency in HEK293 cells as compared to TMC NC and the optimal TMC-Cys(100,30) NC showed a 1.5-fold enhancement than Lipofectamine2000. Such results were further confirmed by in vivo transfection with a 2.3-fold and 4.1-fold higher transfection efficiency of TMC-Cys(100,30) NC than TMC(100,30) NC and Lipofectamine2000, respectively. Therefore, TMC-Cys/DNA nanocomplexes could be a promising gene delivery system with in vitro and in vivo superiority to Lipofectamine2000. Copyright 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20093155 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2010.01.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776