| Literature DB >> 23676471 |
Rosanne Raftery1, Fergal J O'Brien, Sally-Ann Cryan.
Abstract
Gene therapy involves the introduction of foreign genetic material into cells in order exert a therapeutic effect. The application of gene therapy to the field of orthopaedic tissue engineering is extremely promising as the controlled release of therapeutic proteins such as bone morphogenetic proteins have been shown to stimulate bone repair. However, there are a number of drawbacks associated with viral and synthetic non-viral gene delivery approaches. One natural polymer which has generated interest as a gene delivery vector is chitosan. Chitosan is biodegradable, biocompatible and non-toxic. Much of the appeal of chitosan is due to the presence of primary amine groups in its repeating units which become protonated in acidic conditions. This property makes it a promising candidate for non-viral gene delivery. Chitosan-based vectors have been shown to transfect a number of cell types including human embryonic kidney cells (HEK293) and human cervical cancer cells (HeLa). Aside from its use in gene delivery, chitosan possesses a range of properties that show promise in tissue engineering applications; it is biodegradable, biocompatible, has anti-bacterial activity, and, its cationic nature allows for electrostatic interaction with glycosaminoglycans and other proteoglycans. It can be used to make nano- and microparticles, sponges, gels, membranes and porous scaffolds. Chitosan has also been shown to enhance mineral deposition during osteogenic differentiation of MSCs in vitro. The purpose of this review is to critically discuss the use of chitosan as a gene delivery vector with emphasis on its application in orthopedic tissue engineering.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23676471 PMCID: PMC6270408 DOI: 10.3390/molecules18055611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Molecular structures of chitin and chitosan [13]. Permission to reproduce the figure granted by authors and IOP publishing doi:10.1088/2043-6262/2/4/045004.
Figure 2Non-viral gene delivery: The criteria to be met in the development of successful non-viral nucleic acid delivery vectors [32].
Figure 3Electrostatic interaction between chitosan and DNA leads to the formation of a positively charged CS-DNA complex.
Figure 4Schematic representation of ionic gelation method.
Figure 5Schematic representation of complex coacervation formulation method.
Figure 6Schematic of chitosan-mediated transfection by endocytosis.
Cell types that have been transfected using chitosan-pDNA complexes.
| Cell type | Origin | Mw | DNA content | +/− serum | pH of media | Transfection efficiency | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HEK293 | Murine | 390 kDa | 0.1–5 µg/well | + | 7.4 | 15%–20% | [ |
| 390 kDa | 0.1–5 µg/well | + | 7.4 | 1%–18% (DNA dose dependent) | [ | ||
| 160 kDa | 0.33 µg/well | - | 7.4 | 25% | [ | ||
| 150, 400, 600 kDa | 5–10 µg/well | + | 7.4 | 104pg βgal/mg protein | [ | ||
| 10, 40, 80, 150 kDa | 2.5 µg/well | + | 6.5 & 7.1 | 0%–40% (Mw, DD, N/P, pH dependent) | [ | ||
| 113 kDa | 1 µg/well | + | 7.4 | 25% | [ | ||
| 4.7, 8, 11.6, 16.4, 24.8, 32.9, 146 kD | 0.33 µg/well | - | 7 | 5%–60% (Mw, N/P dependent) | [ | ||
| A549 | Human | 52 kDa, | 10 µg/well | + | 6.9 | 10 × 104 RLU | [ |
| COS-1 | Simian | 7, 24, 32, 49, 74, 86, 92, 102, 230 and 540 kDa | 10 µg/well | + and − | 7.4 | + serum: 1 × 106 RLU/mg protein (102 kDa) | [ |
| −serum: 7.5 × 105 RLU/mg protein (540 kDa) | |||||||
| HeLa | Human | (1) 52 kDa | 10 µg/well | + | 6.9 | [ | |
| (2) 70 kDa | 6 µg/well | + | 7.4 | 106–108 RLU/mg protein | [ | ||
| (3) 390 kDa | 0.1–5 µg/well | + | 7.4 | No transfection | [ | ||
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| MG63 | Human | 150, 400, 600 kDa | 5–10 µg/well | + | 7.4 | No transfection | [ |
| MSCs | Human | 150, 400, 600 kDa | 5–10 µg/well | + | 7.4 | No transfection | [ |
Cell types that have been transfected using chitosan-RNAi complexes.
| Chitosan-RNAi ComplexesCell Lines | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell type | Origin | Mw | RNAi content | +/− serum | pH | Gene Silencing Efficiency | Ref. |
| CHO K1 | Hamster | 4 pmol/well | + | 7.4 | Up to 82% with 470 kDa formulation | [ | |
| HEK 293 | Human | 4 pmol/well | + | 7.4 | Up to 44% with 470 kDa formulation | [ | |
| H1299 | Human | (1) 8.9–173 kDa | 50 nmol/well | - | 7.4 | Up to 80% at high Mw | [ |
| HepG2 | Human | 11.8 kDa | 10 pmol/well | + | 6.5 | 55% | [ |
| LS174T | Human | 11.8–110.9 kDa | 10 pmol/well | + | 6.5 | 80% at low Mw | [ |
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| Peritoneal Macrophages | Human | 114 kDa | 50, 100, 200 nmol/well | - | 7.4 | 86.9% | [ |
Figure 7Schematic of tissue engineering triad.