| Literature DB >> 30458360 |
Meredith A Jackson1, Sean K Bedingfield1, Fang Yu1, Mitchell E Stokan1, Rachel E Miles1, Elizabeth J Curvino1, Ella N Hoogenboezem1, Rachel H Bonami2, Shrusti S Patel1, Peggy L Kendall3, Todd D Giorgio1, Craig L Duvall4.
Abstract
While polymeric nano-formulations for RNAi therapeutics hold great promise for molecularly-targeted, personalized medicine, they possess significant systemic delivery challenges including rapid clearance from circulation and the potential for carrier-associated toxicity due to cationic polymer or lipid components. Herein, we evaluated the in vivo pharmacokinetic and safety impact of often-overlooked formulation parameters, including the ratio of carrier polymer to cargo siRNA and hydrophobic siRNA modification in combination with hydrophobic polymer components (dual hydrophobization). For these studies, we used nano-polyplexes (NPs) with well-shielded, zwitterionic coronas, resulting in various NP formulations of equivalent hydrodynamic size and neutral surface charge regardless of charge ratio. Doubling nano-polyplex charge ratio from 10 to 20 increased circulation half-life five-fold and pharmacokinetic area under the curve four-fold, but was also associated with increased liver enzymes, a marker of hepatic damage. Dual hydrophobization achieved by formulating NPs with palmitic acid-modified siRNA (siPA-NPs) both reduced the amount of carrier polymer required to achieve optimal pharmacokinetic profiles and abrogated liver toxicities. We also show that optimized zwitterionic siPA-NPs are well-tolerated upon long-term, repeated administration in mice and exhibit greater than two-fold increased uptake in orthotopic MDA-MB-231 xenografts compared to commercial transfection reagent, in vivo-jetPEI®. These data suggest that charge ratio optimization has important in vivo implications and that dual hydrophobization strategies can be used to maximize both NP circulation time and safety.Entities:
Keywords: Drug delivery; Dual hydrophobization; Pharmacokinetics; RNA interference; Toxicology; Zwitterionic polyplexes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30458360 PMCID: PMC6534819 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2018.11.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479