| Literature DB >> 30091612 |
Ye Tian1, Mengxue Zhou2, Haigang Shi1, Sijia Gao1, Guocheng Xie1, Meng Zhu1, Man Wu1, Jun Chen2, Zhongwei Niu1,3.
Abstract
Inspired by the high gene transfer efficiency of viral vectors and to avoid side effects, we present here a 1D rod-like gene-silencing vector based on a plant virus. By decorating the transacting activator of transduction (TAT) peptide on the exterior surface, the TAT-modified tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) achieves a tunable isoelectric point (from ∼3.5 to ∼9.6) depending on the TAT dose. In addition to enhanced cell internalization, this plant virus-based vector (TMV-TAT) acquired endo/lysosomal escape capacity without inducing lysosomal damage, resulting in both high efficiency and low cytotoxicity. By loading silencer green fluorescent protein (GFP) siRNA onto the TMV-TAT vector (siRNA@TMV-TAT) and interfering with GFP-expressing mouse epidermal stem cells (ESCs/GFP) in vitro, the proportion of GFP-positive cells could be knocked down to levels even lower than 15% at a concentration of ∼100% cell viability. Moreover, by interfering with GFP-expressing highly metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma (MHCC97-H/GFP) tumors in vivo, treatment with siRNA@TMV-TAT complexes for 10 days achieved a GFP-negative rate as high as 80.8%. This work combines the high efficiency of viral vectors and the safety of nonviral vectors and may provide a promising strategy for gene-silencing technology.Entities:
Keywords: Tobacco mosaic virus; cell-penetrating peptide; endosomal escape; gene silence; viral vector
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30091612 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b01805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189