| Literature DB >> 26765970 |
Kotaro Hayashi1, Hiroyuki Chaya2, Shigeto Fukushima3, Sumiyo Watanabe2, Hiroyasu Takemoto2,4, Kensuke Osada1,5, Nobuhiro Nishiyama2,4,6, Kanjiro Miyata2, Kazunori Kataoka1,2,3,6.
Abstract
Polyion complexes (b-PICs) are prepared by mixing single- or double-stranded oligo RNA (aniomer) with poly(ethylene glycol)-b-poly(L-lysine) (PEG-PLL) (block catiomer) to clarify the effect of aniomer chain rigidity on association behaviors at varying concentrations. Here, a 21-mer single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) (persistence length: 1.0 nm) and a 21-mer double-stranded RNA (small interfering RNA, siRNA) (persistence length: 62 nm) are compared. Both oligo RNAs form a minimal charge-neutralized ionomer pair with a single PEG-PLL chain, termed unit b-PIC (uPIC), at low concentrations (<≈ 0.01 mg mL(-1)). Above the critical association concentration (≈ 0.01 mg mL(-1)), ssRNA b-PICs form secondary associates, PIC micelles, with sizes up to 30-70 nm, while no such multimolecular assembly is observed for siRNA b-PICs. The entropy gain associated with the formation of a segregated PIC phase in the multimolecular PIC micelles may not be large enough for rigid siRNA strands to compensate with appreciably high steric repulsion derived from PEG chains. Chain rigidity appears to be a critical parameter in polyion complex association.Entities:
Keywords: block copolymers; micellization; polyion complexes; siRNA; supramolecular chemistry
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26765970 DOI: 10.1002/marc.201500661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Macromol Rapid Commun ISSN: 1022-1336 Impact factor: 5.734