| Literature DB >> 33932594 |
Michael Karimov1, Marion Schulz1, Tim Kahl1, Sandra Noske1, Malgorzata Kubczak2, Ines Gockel3, René Thieme3, Thomas Büch1, Anja Reinert4, Maksim Ionov2, Maria Bryszewska2, Heike Franke5, Ute Krügel5, Alexander Ewe1, Achim Aigner6.
Abstract
Therapeutic gene silencing by RNA interference relies on the safe and efficient in vivo delivery of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Polyethylenimines are among the most studied cationic polymers for gene delivery. For several reasons including superior tolerability, small linear PEIs would be preferable over branched PEIs, but they show poor siRNA complexation. Their chemical modification for siRNA formulation has not been extensively explored so far. We generated a set of small linear PEIs bearing tyrosine modifications (LPxY), leading to substantially enhanced siRNA delivery and knockdown efficacy in vitro in various cell lines, including hard-to-transfect cells. The tyrosine-modified linear 10 kDa PEI (LP10Y) is particularly powerful, associated with favorable physicochemical properties and very high biocompatibility. Systemically administered LP10Y/siRNA complexes reveal antitumor effects in mouse xenograft and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models, and their direct application into the brain achieves therapeutic inhibition of orthotopic glioma xenografts. LP10Y is particularly interesting for therapeutic siRNA delivery.Entities:
Keywords: RNAi in vivo; Therapeutic siRNA delivery; Tumor xenografts and PDX models; Tyrosine-modified linear polyethlyenimines; siRNA transfection
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33932594 DOI: 10.1016/j.nano.2021.102403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomedicine ISSN: 1549-9634 Impact factor: 5.307