Publication | Closed Access
Fluorinated α-Helical Polypeptides Synchronize Mucus Permeation and Cell Penetration toward Highly Efficient Pulmonary siRNA Delivery against Acute Lung Injury
147
Citations
50
References
2020
Year
Acute Lung InjuryNanotherapeuticsInflammatory Lung DiseaseEngineeringLung InflammationImmunologyMucus LayerGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringHighly Efficient PulmonaryNanomedicineCell PenetrationPulmonary Sirna DeliveryFluorocarbon SegmentsPulmonary PharmacologyLung DepositionImmunoengineeringPulmonary MedicineLung CancerBiomolecular EngineeringGene TherapiesNano-drug DeliveryMedicine
The mucus layer and cell membrane are two major barriers against pulmonary siRNA delivery. Commonly used polycationic gene vectors can hardly penetrate the mucus layer due to the adsorption of mucin glycoproteins that trap and destabilize the polyplexes. Herein, guanidinated and fluorinated bifunctional helical polypeptides were developed to synchronizingly overcome these two barriers. The guanidine domain and α-helix facilitated trans-membrane siRNA delivery into macrophages, whereas fluorination of the polypeptides dramatically enhanced the mucus permeation capability by ∼240 folds, because incorporated fluorocarbon segments prevented adsorption of mucin glycoproteins onto polyplexes surfaces. Thus, when delivering TNF-α siRNA intratracheally, the top-performing polypeptide P7F7 provoked highly efficient gene knockdown by ∼96% at 200 μg/kg siRNA and exerted pronounced anti-inflammatory effect against acute lung injury. This study thus provides an effective strategy for transmucosal gene delivery, and it also renders promising utilities for the noninvasive, localized treatment of inflammatory pulmonary diseases.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1