Issue 18, 2015

Cell penetrating peptide-based polyplexes shelled with polysaccharide to improve stability and gene transfection

Abstract

Cell-penetrating peptides (CPP) have been widely developed as a strategy to enhance cell penetrating ability and transfection. In this work, octa-arginine modified dextran gene vector with pH-sensitivity was developed via host–guest interactions. α-Cyclodextrin was modified with octa-arginine (CDR), which had excellent cell penetrating ability. Dextran was selected as a backbone and modified with azobenzene as guest units by acid–labile imine bonds (Az-I-Dex). The supramolecular polymer CDR/Az-I-Dex with high a C/A molar ratio (molar ratio of CD on CDR to Az on Az-I-Dex) was unfavorable for DNA condensation. The dextran shell of CDR/Az-I-Dex/DNA polyplexes improved the stability under physiological conditions. However, once treated with acetate buffer (pH 5.4) for 3 h, large aggregates formed rapidly due to the cleavage of the dextran shell. As expected, the vector had cell viability of 80% even when the CDR concentration increased to 100 μg mL−1. Moreover, due to the effective cellular uptake efficiency, CDR/Az-I-Dex/DNA polyplexes had 6–300 times higher transfection efficiency than CDR/DNA polyplexes. It was even higher than high molecular weight PLL-based polyplexes of HEK293 T cells. Importantly, chloroquine as an endosomal escape agent could not improve the transfection of CDR/Az-I-Dex/DNA polyplexes, which indicated that the CDR/Az-I-Dex supramolecular polymer had its own ability for endosomal escape. These results suggested that the CPP-based polyplexes shelled with polysaccharide can be promising non-viral gene delivery carriers.

Graphical abstract: Cell penetrating peptide-based polyplexes shelled with polysaccharide to improve stability and gene transfection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Nov 2014
Accepted
24 Mar 2015
First published
25 Mar 2015

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 8476-8484

Author version available

Cell penetrating peptide-based polyplexes shelled with polysaccharide to improve stability and gene transfection

W. Li, Y. Liu, J. Du, K. Ren and Y. Wang, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 8476 DOI: 10.1039/C4NR07037B

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