Literature DB >> 22616637

Structural evolution of environmentally responsive cationic liposome-DNA complexes with a reducible lipid linker.

Rahau S Shirazi1, Kai K Ewert, Bruno F B Silva, Cecilia Leal, Youli Li, Cyrus R Safinya.   

Abstract

Environmentally responsive materials (i.e., materials that respond to changes in their environment with a change in their properties or structure) are attracting increasing amounts of interest. We recently designed and synthesized a series of cleavable multivalent lipids (CMVLn, with n = 2-5 being the number of positive headgroup charges at full protonation) with a disulfide bond in the linker between their cationic headgroup and hydrophobic tails. The self-assembled complexes of the CMVLs and DNA are a prototypical environmentally responsive material, undergoing extensive structural rearrangement when exposed to reducing agents. We investigated the structural evolution of CMVL-DNA complexes at varied complex composition, temperature, and incubation time using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS). A related lipid with a stable linker, TMVL4, was used as a control. In a nonreducing environment, CMVL-DNA complexes form the lamellar (L(α)(C)) phase, with DNA rods sandwiched between lipid bilayers. However, new self-assembled phases form when the disulfide linker is cleaved by dithiothreitol or the biologically relevant reducing agent glutathione. The released DNA and cleaved CMVL headgroups form a loosely organized phase, giving rise to a characteristic broad SAXS correlation profile. CMVLs with high headgroup charge also form condensed DNA bundles. Intriguingly, the cleaved hydrophobic tails of the CMVLs reassemble into tilted chain-ordered L(β') phases upon incubation at physiological temperature (37 °C), as indicated by characteristic WAXS peaks. X-ray scattering further reveals that two of the three phases (L(βF), L(βL), and L(βI)) constituting the L(β') phase coexist in these samples. The described system may have applications in lipid-based nanotechnologies.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22616637      PMCID: PMC3399028          DOI: 10.1021/la301181b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  49 in total

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10.  Condensation of DNA by multivalent cations: considerations on mechanism.

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Journal:  Biopolymers       Date:  1991-11       Impact factor: 2.505

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