| Literature DB >> 35009324 |
Julia Jerzykiewicz1, Aleksander Czogalla1.
Abstract
Recent years have witnessed rapidly growing interest in application of gene therapies for cancer treatment. However, this strategy requires nucleic acid carriers that are both effective and safe. In this context, non-viral vectors have advantages over their viral counterparts. In particular, lipopolyplexes-nanocomplexes consisting of nucleic acids condensed with polyvalent molecules and enclosed in lipid vesicles-currently offer great promise. In this article, we briefly review the major aspects of developing such non-viral vectors based on polyethyleneimine and outline their properties in light of anticancer therapeutic strategies. Finally, examples of current in vivo studies involving such lipopolyplexes and possibilities for their future development are presented.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; gene therapy; lipids; lipopolyplexes; liposomes; non-viral vectors; nucleic acids; polyethyleneimine
Year: 2021 PMID: 35009324 PMCID: PMC8746209 DOI: 10.3390/ma15010179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Structure and components of various polyethyleneimine-based lipopolyplex carriers for gene delivery. A’—Reversed lipopolyplexes with polyethyleneimine bound covalently to hydrophobic anchor (e.g., triamcinolone acetonide) embedded in a neutral lipid bilayer; A”—reversed lipopolyplexes composed of anionic lipids that enable docking of positively charged polyplexes based on polyethyleneimine; B—“classical” lipopolyplexes with the addition of cationic lipids; C—lipopolyplex with targeting ligands (e.g., antibodies, transferrin, aptamers) conjugated to the surface via polyethylene glycol (PEG) modified lipids. bPEI—branched polyethyleneimine; DMPG—1.2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-(1′-rac-glycerol) (sodium salt), negatively charged; DOPE—1.2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine; DOTAP—1.2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane (chloride salt), positively charged; DPPC—1.2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine; DSPE-PEG—1.2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylethanolamine conjugated with polyethylene glycol chains; lPEI—linear polyethyleneimine.
Figure 2Possible procedures used in lipopolyplex preparation. A—Hydration of thin lipid film prepared from cationic lipids and polyethyleneimine (PEI) with nucleic acid solution [91]; B—reverse lipopolyplexes obtained through complexation of nucleic acid with PEI grafted to neutral lipid vesicles via hydrophobic anchor [110]; C—injection of polyplex solution into ethanolic solution of neutral lipids is a feasible way to obtain PEGylated lipopolyplexes [89,111]; D—incubation of polyplexes with preformed liposomes can result in either reverse lipopolyplexes (when anionic vesicles are used) [108,109] or “classic” lipopolyplexes (neutral or cationic vesicles) [47,49,54,58,88,91,93,96,98,102,103]; for preparation of cationic, stealth lipopolyplexes, PEGylated lipids could be incorporated in preformed carriers via mixture heating [96,98]; E—hydration of thin lipid film enables preparation of targeted lipopolyplexes [48,92]; F—hydration of lyophilized anionic liposomes might help polyplex internalization [88]; G—coating polyplexes with multicarboxyl dodecyl glucopyranoside anchors them to neutral lipid vesicles [40]. The presented approaches could be combined with each other and further modified, which enables a broad array of various lipopolyplexes to be generated.
Examples of PEI-based lipopolyplexes. BERA—bioengineered non-coding RNA agents, bPEI—branched polyethyleneimine, CDG-25 kDa PEI—25 kDa polyethyleneimine conjugated with multicarboxyl dodecyl glucopyranoside, Chol—cholesterol, DC-Chol—3β-[N-(N′,N′-dimethylaminoethane)-carbamoyl]cholesterol hydrochloride, DMG-PEG2000—1.2-dimyristoyl-rac-glycero-3-methoxypolyethylene glycol-2000 DOPE—1.2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine, DOTMA—1.2-di-O-octadecenyl-3-trimethylammonium propane, DPPC—1.2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, DSPE-PEG2000—1.2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylethanolamine conjugated with 2000 kDa polyethylene glycol chains, DSPE-PEG-Mal—1.2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylethanolamine conjugated with maleimide via polyethylene glycol chains, DSPE-PEI 25 kDa—1.2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylethanolamine conjugated with 25 kDa polyethyleneimine, ECV—extracellular vesicles, HA—hyaluronic acid, HEPC—hydrogenated egg phosphatidylcholine, lPEI—linear polyethyleneimine, ODN—oligonucleotides, PC—phosphatidylcholine, pDNA—plasmid DNA, PE—phosphatidylethanolamine, PEI F25-LMW—low molecular weight, polyethyleneimine (4–10 kDa) derived through the fractionation of a commercially available 25 kDa branched PEI by size exclusion chromatography, saRNA—small activating RNA, siRNA—small inhibiting RNA.
| Nucleic Acid | Polyethyleneimine | Lipids | Targeting | Administration | Targeted Cells | Mode of Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| saRNA | 2 kDa bPEI | PE | HA | Local | Human colorectal tumor xenografts | Stimulation of p21 expression | [ |
| siRNA | PEI F25-LMW | DPPC | - | Intracranial | Tu2449 murine glioma cells | Knockdown of STAT3 gene expression | [ |
| siRNA | PEI F25-LMW | DPPC | - | Intravenous | PC3 prostate carcinoma xenografts | Knockdown of survivin gene expression | [ |
| siRNA | PEI F25-LMW | ECV | - | Intravenous | PC3 prostate carcinoma xenografts | Knockdown of survivin gene expression | [ |
| ODN | 2.5 kDa lPEI | HEPC, DOPE, DC-Chol, DSPE-PEG2000, DSPE-PEG-Mal | Anti-CD20 antibody conjugated via maleimide | Intravenous | Human Burkitt’s lymphoma Daudi cells | Reduction of the Bcl-2 protein level | [ |
| pDNA | 25 kDa bPEI | DPPC, Chol, DSPE-PEI25kDa | - | Intravenous | PC3 prostate carcinoma xenografts | Reacquisition of PTEN functionality | [ |
| siRNA | CDG—25 kDa PEI | PC, Chol | - | Intravenous | U-87 MG glioblastoma xenografts | Silencing of VEGF expression | [ |
| BERA | 10 kDa bPEI | DOTMA, Chol, | - | Intravenous | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Selective modulation of the expression of several genes (LIN28B, ARID3B, Bcl-xl, c-Myc) | [ |
| Intravenous | Non-small-cell lung carcinoma patient-derived xenografts | Selective modulation of the expression of several genes (RAS, VAMP3, CDK6) | [ |