Effects of Trehalose Polycation End-Group Functionalization on Plasmid DNA Uptake and Transfection

被引:15
|
作者
Anderson, Kevin [1 ]
Sizovs, Antons [2 ]
Cortez, Mallory [1 ]
Waldron, Chris [3 ]
Haddleton, D. M. [3 ]
Reineke, Theresa M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Chem, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[2] Virginia Tech, Dept Chem, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA
[3] Univ Warwick, Dept Chem, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England
关键词
CARBOHYDRATE-CONTAINING POLYCATIONS; POLYMERIC GENE DELIVERY; IN-VITRO; THERAPY; CHARGE; PDNA; CYCLOADDITION; CARRIERS; VECTORS; ESTER)S;
D O I
10.1021/bm300471n
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
In this study, we have synthesized six analogs of a trehalose-pentaethylenehexamine glycopolymer (Tr4) that contain (1A) adamantane, (1B) carboxy, (1C) alkynyl-oligoethyleneamine, (1D) azido trehalose, (1E) octyl, or (1F) oligoethyleneamine end groups and evaluated the effects of polymer end group chemistry on the ability of these systems to bind, compact, and deliver pDNA to cultured HeLa cells. The polymers were synthesized in one pot azide-alkyne cycloaddition reactions with an adaptation of the Carothers equation for step growth polymerization to produce a series of polymers with similar degrees of polymerization. An excess of end-capping monomer was added at the end of the polymerizations to maximize functionalization efficiency, which was evaluated with GPC, NMR, and MALDI-TOF. The polymers were all found to bind and compact pDNA at similarly low N/P ratios and form polyplexes with plasmid DNA. The effects of the different end group structures were most evident in the polyplex internalization and transfection assays in the presence of serum as determined by flow cytometry and luciferase gene expression, respectively. The Tr4 polymers end capped with carboxyl groups (1B) (N/P = 7), octyne (1E) (N/P = 7), and oligoethyleneamine (1F) (N/P = 7), were taken into cells as polyplex and exhibited the highest levels of fluorescence, resulting from labeled plasmid. Similarly, the polymers end-functionalized with carboxyl groups (1E at N/P = 7), octyl groups (1E at N/P = 15), and in particular oligoethyleneamine groups (1F at N/P = 15) yielded dramatically higher reporter gene expression in the presence of serum. This study yields insight into how very subtle structural changes in polymer chemistry, such as end groups can yield very significant differences in the biological delivery efficiency and transgene expression of polymers used for pDNA delivery.
引用
收藏
页码:2229 / 2239
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Acrylates as end-group functionalization agents in ROMP
    Lexer, Christina
    Saf, Robert
    Stelzer, Franz
    Slugovc, Christian
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2007, 233
  • [2] Photoactivation for polymerization, end-group functionalization, and bioconjugation
    Sumerlin, Brent
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 256
  • [3] Photoactivation for polymerization, end-group functionalization, and bioconjugation
    Carmean, R.
    Sims, Michael
    Figg, Charles
    Scheutz, Georg
    Kubo, Tomohiro
    Becker, Troy
    Sumerlin, Brent
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 257
  • [4] Reproducibility and Efficiency of Carbon Nanotube End-Group Generation and Functionalization
    Andersson, Claes-Henrik
    Grennberg, Helena
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 2009, 2009 (26) : 4421 - 4428
  • [5] End-group functionalization of a conjugated azomethine with ureas for property tailoring
    Tremblay, Marie-Helene
    Al Ahmad, Abdel
    Skene, W. G.
    NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2020, 44 (43) : 18813 - 18822
  • [6] Polycation-mediated gene delivery: Challenges and considerations for the process of plasmid DNA transfection
    Modra, Karl
    Dai, Sheng
    Zhang, Hu
    Shi, Bingyang
    Bi, Jingxiu
    ENGINEERING IN LIFE SCIENCES, 2015, 15 (05): : 489 - 498
  • [7] Uptake and Transfection with Polymeric Nanoparticles Are Dependent on Polymer End-Group Structure, but Largely Independent of Nanoparticle Physical and Chemical Properties
    Sunshine, Joel C.
    Peng, Daniel Y.
    Green, Jordan J.
    MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS, 2012, 9 (11) : 3375 - 3383
  • [8] Enzyme-catalyzed lactone polymerizations: End-group functionalization.
    Kulshrestha, A
    Libishowski, J
    Duda, A
    Penczek, S
    Gross, RA
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2002, 224 : U378 - U379
  • [9] End-Group Functionalization and Postpolymerization Modification of Helical Poly(isocyanide)s
    Croom, Anna
    Tarallo, Rossella
    Weck, Marcus
    JOURNAL OF POLYMER SCIENCE PART A-POLYMER CHEMISTRY, 2016, 54 (17) : 2766 - 2773
  • [10] End-group effects on the structure and spectroscopy of oligoazines
    Euler, WB
    Cheng, M
    Zhao, C
    CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS, 1999, 11 (12) : 3702 - 3708