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Journal ArticleDOI

Nonviral Vectors for Gene Delivery

Meredith A. Mintzer, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2009 - 
- Vol. 109, Iss: 2, pp 259-302
TLDR
Two nonviral gene delivery systems using either biodegradable poly(D,Llactide-co-glycolide) (PLG) nanoparticles or cell penetrating peptide (CPP) complexes have been designed and studied using A549 human lung epithelial cells.
Abstract
The development of nonviral vectors for safe and efficient gene delivery has been gaining considerable attention recently. An ideal nonviral vector must protect the gene against degradation by nuclease in the extracellular matrix, internalize the plasma membrane, escape from the endosomal compartment, unpackage the gene at some point and have no detrimental effects. In comparison to viruses, nonviral vectors are relatively easy to synthesize, less immunogenic, low in cost, and have no limitation in the size of a gene that can be delivered. Significant progress has been made in the basic science and applications of various nonviral gene delivery vectors; however, the majority of nonviral approaches are still inefficient and often toxic. To this end, two nonviral gene delivery systems using either biodegradable poly(D,Llactide-co-glycolide) (PLG) nanoparticles or cell penetrating peptide (CPP) complexes have been designed and studied using A549 human lung epithelial cells. PLG nanoparticles were optimized for gene delivery by varying particle surface chemistry using different coating materials that adsorb to the particle surface during formation. A variety of cationic coating materials were studied and compared to more conventional surfactants used for PLG nanoparticle fabrication. Nanoparticles (~200 nm) efficiently encapsulated plasmids encoding for luciferase (80-90%) and slowly released the same for two weeks. After a delay, moderate levels of gene expression appeared at day 5 for certain positively charged PLG particles and gene expression was maintained for at least two weeks. In contrast, gene expression mediated by polyethyleneimine (PEI) ended at day 5. PLG particles were also significantly less

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Citations
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Self‐Assembled Vehicle Construction via Boronic Acid Coupling and Host–Guest Interaction for Serum‐Tolerant DNA Transport and pH‐Responsive Drug Delivery

TL;DR: By exploiting boronic acid coupling and host–guest chemistry, a pH‐responsive drug/gene co‐delivery nanoplatform is designed for cancer treatments with the excellently serum‐tolerant transfection activity and the capability to load and release hydrophobic drugs in an acidity‐accelerated manner.
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Cation-induced polyelectrolyte-polyelectrolyte attraction in solutions of DNA and nucleosome core particles

TL;DR: Current studies on the experimentally induced cation compaction and aggregation in solutions of DNA and nucleosome core particles and the theoretical modelling of these processes using coarse-grained continuum models with explicit mobile ions and with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disulfide-functional poly(amido amine)s with tunable degradability for gene delivery

TL;DR: The feasibility of introducing steric hindrance near the disulfide moiety to tune polyplex stability against bioreduction is demonstrated, and results show that PAA2m is a promising polymer to be further developed for gene therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Living Anionic Copolymerization of 1-(Alkylsulfonyl)aziridines to Form Poly(sulfonylaziridine) and Linear Poly(ethylenimine)

TL;DR: In this paper, the anionic ring-opening copolymerization of 1-(methylsulfonyl)aziridine (MsAz) and 1-(sec-butylsulfononyl)-aziridine (sBsAz) produces a soluble random copolymers P(MsAz-r-sbsAz)-b-P(MeMsAz), which can subsequently be converted to linear poly(ethylenimine) (lPEI).
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Surface functionalization of carbon nanomaterials by self-assembling hydrophobin proteins.

TL;DR: It is shown that the class I hydrophobins EAS and HYD3 can self-assemble to form a single-molecule thick coating on a range of nanomaterials, including single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), graphene sheets, highly oriented pyrolytic graphite, and mica.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A versatile vector for gene and oligonucleotide transfer into cells in culture and in vivo: polyethylenimine

TL;DR: Together, these properties make PEI a promising vector for gene therapy and an outstanding core for the design of more sophisticated devices because its efficiency relies on extensive lysosome buffering that protects DNA from nuclease degradation, and consequent lysOSomal swelling and rupture that provide an escape mechanism for the PEI/DNA particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lipofection: a highly efficient, lipid-mediated DNA-transfection procedure

TL;DR: Depending upon the cell line, lipofection is from 5- to greater than 100-fold more effective than either the calcium phosphate or the DEAE-dextran transfection technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: RNA and DNA expression vectors containing genes for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase, luciferase, and beta-galactosidase were separately injected into mouse skeletal muscle in vivo and expression was comparable to that obtained from fibroblasts transfected in vitro under optimal conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new class of polymers: Starburst-dendritic macromolecules

TL;DR: Starburst polymers as mentioned in this paper are a class of topological macromolecules which are derived from classical monomers/oligomers by their extraordinary symmetry, high branching and maximized terminal functionality density.
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