Literature DB >> 24172855

A photo-degradable gene delivery system for enhanced nuclear gene transcription.

Hoyoung Lee1, Yeji Kim, Patrick G Schweickert, Stephen F Konieczny, You-Yeon Won.   

Abstract

There currently exists a significant gap in our understanding of how the detailed chemical characteristics of polycation gn class="Chemical">ene carriers inpan>fluenpan>ce their delivery performanpan>ces inpan> overcominpan>g anpan> importanpan>t cellular-level tranpan>sport barrier, i.e., inpan>tranpan>uclear gpan> class="Chemical">ene transcription. In this study, a UV-degradable gene carrier material (ENE4-1) was synthesized by crosslinking low molecular weight branched polyethylenimine (bPEI-2k) molecules using UV-cleavable o-nitrobenzyl urethane (NBU) as the linker molecule. NBU degrades upon exposure to mild UV irradiation. Therefore, this UV-degradable carrier allows us to control the chemical characteristics of the polymer/DNA complex (polyplex) particles at desired locations within the intracellular environment. By using this photolytic DNA carrier, we found that the exact timing of the UV degradation significantly influences the gene transfection efficiencies of ENE4-1/DNA(pGL2) polyplexes in HeLa cells. Interestingly, even if the polyplexes were UV-degraded at different intracellular locations/times, their nuclear entry efficiency was not influenced by the location/timing of UV degradation. The UV treatment did not influence the size or binding strength of the polyplexes. However, we confirmed that the degradation of the carrier molecules impacts the chemical characteristics of the polyplexes (it produces carbamic acid and nitrosobenzyl aldehyde groups on ENE4-1). We believe that these anionic acid groups enhance the interaction of the polyplexes with nuclear transcription proteins and thus the final gene expression levels; this effect was found to occur, even though UV irradiation itself has a general effect of reducing transfection efficiencies. Excess (uncomplexed) ENE4-1 polymers appear to not play any role in the UV-enhanced gene transcription phenomenon.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Gene delivery; Nuclear entry; Nuclear gene transcription; Photo-degradable polymer; Polyethylenimine

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24172855      PMCID: PMC3849696          DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2013.10.030

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomaterials        ISSN: 0142-9612            Impact factor:   12.479


  33 in total

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2.  Photodegradable polyurethane self-assembled nanoparticles for photocontrollable release.

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3.  Efficient gene transfer using reversibly cross-linked low molecular weight polyethylenimine.

Authors:  M A Gosselin; W Guo; R J Lee
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4.  Loosening of DNA/polycation complexes by synthetic polyampholyte to improve the transcription efficiency: effect of charge balance in the polyampholyte.

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Review 6.  Ultraviolet radiation-mediated damage to cellular DNA.

Authors:  Jean Cadet; Evelyne Sage; Thierry Douki
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7.  Gene silencing by gold nanoshell-mediated delivery and laser-triggered release of antisense oligonucleotide and siRNA.

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8.  Missing pieces in understanding the intracellular trafficking of polycation/DNA complexes.

Authors:  You-Yeon Won; Rahul Sharma; Stephen F Konieczny
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9.  Block catiomer polyplexes with regulated densities of charge and disulfide cross-linking directed to enhance gene expression.

Authors:  Kanjiro Miyata; Yoshinori Kakizawa; Nobuhiro Nishiyama; Atsushi Harada; Yuichi Yamasaki; Hiroyuki Koyama; Kazunori Kataoka
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Review 10.  Transcription and DNA damage: a link to a kink.

Authors:  D A Scicchitano; I Mellon
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 9.031

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3.  Catch and Release: Photocleavable Cationic Diblock Copolymers as a Potential Platform for Nucleic Acid Delivery.

Authors:  Matthew D Green; Abbygail A Foster; Chad T Greco; Raghunath Roy; Rachel M Lehr; Thomas H Epps; Millicent O Sullivan
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  3 in total

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