Publication | Closed Access
Biophysical Properties and Supramolecular Structure of Self-Assembled Liposome/ε-Peptide/DNA Nanoparticles: Correlation with Gene Delivery
15
Citations
31
References
2011
Year
NanoparticlesEngineeringPeptide EngineeringMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceGene DeliveryAnalytical UltracentrifugationDna NanotechnologyPlasmid DnaBiophysicsBiochemistrySupramolecular StructureSelf-assembled Liposome/ε-peptide/dna NanoparticlesBioconjugationSurface ChargeBiomolecular EngineeringSelf-assemblyBiotechnologyDrug Delivery SystemsNano-drug DeliveryBiophysical PropertiesMedicine
Using solid-phase synthesis, lysine can be oligomerized by a reaction of the peptide carboxylate with the ε-amino group to produce nontoxic, biodegradable cationic peptides, ε-oligo(L-lysines). Here α-substituted derivatives of such ε-oligo(L-lysines) containing arginine and histidine in the side chain were tested as vectors for in vitro gene delivery. Combination of ε-oligolysines with the cationic lipid DOTAP and plasmid DNA resulted in transfection efficiency exceeding that of DOTAP alone, without significant increase in cytotoxicity. Synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering studies revealed self-assembly of the DOTAP, ε-oligolysines, and DNA to ordered lamellar complexes. High transfection efficiency of the nanoparticles correlates with increase in zeta potential above +20 mV and requires particle size to be below 500 nm. The synergistic effect of branched ε-oligolysines and DOTAP in gene delivery can be explained by the increase in surface charge and by the supramolecular structure of the DOTAP/ε-oligolysine/DNA nanoparticles.
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