PEGylation significantly affects cellular uptake and intracellular trafficking of non-viral gene delivery particles

被引:619
作者
Mishra, S
Webster, P
Davis, ME [1 ]
机构
[1] CALTECH, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[2] House Ear Res Inst, Ahmansom EM & Adv Imaging Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90057 USA
关键词
polyplex; gene delivery; PEGylation; cyclodextrin;
D O I
10.1078/0171-9335-00363
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
In vitro studies of non-viral gene delivery vectors are typically not performed at physiological conditions, and thus may not provide meaningful results for in vivo investigations. We determine if polycation-plasmid DNA complexes (polyplexes) exploited for in vitro studies behave similarly to variants more applicable to in vivo use by examining their cellular uptake and trafficking. Branched polyethylenimine (25 kDa) or a linear beta-cyclodextrin-containing polymer are each used to formulate polyplexes, which can be PEGylated (PEG: poly(ethylene glycol)) to create particles stable in physiological salt concentrations. Particle size, cellular uptake, intracellular trafficking, and reporter gene expression are reported for polyplexes and for their PEGylated variants. PEGylation confers salt stability to particles but produced a reduction in luciferase expression. Examination of in vitro particle internalization by transmission electron microscopy shows unmodified polyplexes entering cells as large aggregates while PEGylated particles remain small and discrete, both outside and within cells. Unmodified and PEGylated particles enter cells through the endocytic pathway and accumulate in a perinuclear region. Immunolabeling reveals unpackaged exogenous DNA in the cytoplasm and nuclei. It appears all particle types traffic towards the nucleus within vesicles and undergo degradation in vesicles and/or cytoplasm, and eventually some exogenous DNA enters the nucleus, where it is transcribed. In comparing polyplexes and their PEGylated variants, significant differences in particle morphology, cellular uptake, and resultant expression suggest that in vitro studies should be conducted with particles prepared for physiological conditions if the results are to be relevant to in vivo performance.
引用
收藏
页码:97 / 111
页数:15
相关论文
共 28 条
[11]   Novel shielded transferrin-polyethylene glycol-polyethylenimine/DNA complexes for systemic tumor-targeted gene transfer [J].
Kursa, M ;
Walker, GF ;
Roessler, V ;
Ogris, M ;
Roedl, W ;
Kircheis, R ;
Wagner, E .
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY, 2003, 14 (01) :222-231
[12]   Formulation of highly soluble poly(ethylene glycol)-peptide DNA condensates [J].
Kwok, KY ;
McKenzie, DL ;
Evers, DL ;
Rice, KG .
JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 1999, 88 (10) :996-1003
[13]  
LabatMoleur F, 1996, GENE THER, V3, P1010
[14]  
Lechardeur Delphine, 2002, Current Gene Therapy, V2, P183, DOI 10.2174/1566523024605609
[15]   The effect of cell division on the cellular dynamics of microinjected DNA and dextran [J].
Ludtke, JJ ;
Sebestyén, MG ;
Wolff, JA .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2002, 5 (05) :579-588
[16]   Size-dependent DNA mobility in cytoplasm and nucleus [J].
Lukacs, GL ;
Haggie, P ;
Seksek, O ;
Lechardeur, D ;
Freedman, N ;
Verkman, AS .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2000, 275 (03) :1625-1629
[17]   A regulated, NFκB-assisted import of plasmid DNA into mammalian cell nuclei [J].
Mesika, A ;
Grigoreva, I ;
Zohar, M ;
Reich, Z .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2001, 3 (05) :653-657
[18]   The size of DNA/transferrin-PEI complexes is an important factor for gene expression in cultured cells [J].
Ogris, M ;
Steinlein, P ;
Kursa, M ;
Mechtler, K ;
Kircheis, R ;
Wagner, E .
GENE THERAPY, 1998, 5 (10) :1425-1433
[19]  
Ogris M, 2001, AAPS PHARMSCI, V3, part. no.
[20]   PEGylated DNA/transferrin-PEI complexes:: reduced interaction with blood components, extended circulation in blood and potential for systemic gene delivery [J].
Ogris, M ;
Brunner, S ;
Schüller, S ;
Kircheis, R ;
Wagner, E .
GENE THERAPY, 1999, 6 (04) :595-605