| Literature DB >> 24505233 |
Lian Jin1, Xin Zeng2, Ming Liu1, Yan Deng3, Nongyue He3.
Abstract
Gene transfer methods are promising in the field of gene therapy. Current methods for gene transfer include three major groups: viral, physical and chemical methods. This review mainly summarizes development of several types of chemical methods for gene transfer in vitro and in vivo by means of nano-carriers like; calcium phosphates, lipids, and cationic polymers including chitosan, polyethylenimine, polyamidoamine dendrimers, and poly(lactide-co-glycolide). This review also briefly introduces applications of these chemical methods for gene delivery.Entities:
Keywords: Chemical Methods.; Gene delivery; Non-viral; Vectors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24505233 PMCID: PMC3915088 DOI: 10.7150/thno.6914
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Viral systems for gene delivery.
| Transfection systems | Merits | Defects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adenoviruses vectors | Large transgene capacity (up to 38 kb), low host specificity | Tend to yield natural and acute immunologic responses, short-term gene expression | 11, 12 |
| Adeno-associated | Safety, ability to integrate into a specific site on chromosome 19 with no noticeable effects | complicated process of vector production and the limited transgene capacity (up to 4.8 kb) | 13, 14 |
| Retroviral vectors | Ability to transfect dividing cells, | low efficiency | 15, 16 |
| suitable for in situ treatment, transgene capacity of 8 kb | the inability to transfect the non-dividing cells and the risk of insertion | ||
| Lentivirus vectors | High-efficiency infection of dividing and non-dividing cells, long-term stable expression, low immunogenicity, transgene capacity of 8 kb | Difficult design and construction, concerns of biosafety | 17, 18 |
| Herpes simplex virus vectors | transgene capacity of up to 150 kb, neuronotropic features | Difficulty to keep virus action under control | 19, 20 |
| Poxvirus vectors | high stable insertion capacity (more than 25 KB), simple construction, high expression levels | complex structure and biology, risk of cytopathic effects | 21 |
Detailed information and cell types (in nine cell lines) with relatively higher luciferase gene transfection efficiency without fetal calf serum of six commercially available transfection reagents.
| Transfection reagent | Product origin | Based material | Cell types with relatively higher transfection efficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arrest-In | Open Biosystems, USA | Lipid-polymer | PT-30, HeLa, HepG2, 4T1, HCT116 |
| ExpressFect | Denville, USA | Cationic polymer | HeLa, primary epidermal keratinocytes |
| FuGENE HD | Roche, Switzerland | non-liposomal lipid | MC3T3-E1, PT-30, C3H10T1/2, C2C12, Hep G2, 4T1, HCT116 |
| jetPEI | Polyplus-transfection, USA | linear PEI | MC3T3-E1, MCF-7, C2C12, primary epidermal keratinocytes |
| Lipofectamine 2000 | Invitrogen, USA | cationic lipid | C3H10T1/2, MCF-7 |
| SuperFect | Qiagen, USA | activated-dendrimer |
Functionalization of high generation PAMAM dendrimers to achieve higher transfection efficiency.
| Functionalization objective | Functionalization moieties | References |
|---|---|---|
| tailor the dendrimer surface charge and hydrophobicity | aliphatic acid and amino acids including arginine, phenylalanine, lysine, leucine and proline | |
| Specific targeting | targeting moieties such as biotin, transferrin, folic acid, mannose, lactose, galactose, and peptides | |
| pH buffering | guanidine and spermine | |
| nanoparticles such as gold nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes |
Summary of polymeric carriers.
| Carriers | Main advantages | Main limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan | Good biocompatibility and biodegradability; low immunogenicity; low toxicity; antimicrobial activity; | Low insolubility under physiological pH condition; low transfection efficiency; | |
| PEI | Strong DNA condensation capacity; intrinsic endosomal activity; unique buffering capacity; high transfection efficiency; | Bad biodegradability; the contradiction between transfection efficiency and cytotoxicity; | [135, 138, |
| PAMAM | surface functionality; relatively high transfection efficiency; uniform size distribution; lower cytotoxicity; | Low transfection efficiency; | [177, 179, |
| PLGA | Safety; good biodegradability; | Low release rate and low encapsulation efficiency of pDNA; acidic microenvironment induced by it; | [224, 226, |
| PLL | Excellent pDNA condensation capacity; | Relatively high cytotoxicity; low transfection efficiency; |