Rapidly Transducing and Spatially Localized Magnetofection
Using Peptide-Mediated Non-Viral Gene Delivery Based on Iron Oxide
Nanoparticles
Posted on 2020-12-21 - 18:33
Non-viral delivery systems are generally
of low efficiency, which
limits their use in gene therapy and editing applications. We previously
developed a technology termed glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-binding enhanced
transduction (GET) to efficiently deliver a variety of cargos intracellularly;
our system employs GAG-binding peptides, which promote cell targeting,
and cell penetrating peptides (CPPs), which enhance endocytotic cell
internalization. Herein, we describe a further modification by combining
gene delivery and magnetic targeting with the GET technology. We associated
GET peptides, plasmid (p)DNA, and iron oxide superparamagnetic nanoparticles
(MNPs), allowing rapid and targeted GET-mediated uptake by application
of static magnetic fields in NIH3T3 cells. This produced effective
transfection levels (significantly higher than the control) with seconds
to minutes of exposure and localized gene delivery two orders of magnitude
higher in targeted over non-targeted cell monolayers using magnetic
fields (in 15 min exposure delivering GFP reporter pDNA). More importantly,
high cell membrane targeting by GET-DNA and MNP co-complexes and magnetic
fields allowed further enhancement to endocytotic uptake, meaning
that the nucleic acid cargo was rapidly internalized beyond that of
GET complexes alone (GET-DNA). Magnetofection by MNPs combined with
GET-mediated delivery allows magnetic field-guided local transfection
in vitro and could facilitate focused gene delivery for future regenerative
and disease-targeted therapies in vivo.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Blokpoel Ferreras, Lia A.; Chan, Sze Yan; Vazquez Reina, Saul; Dixon, James E. (2021). Rapidly Transducing and Spatially Localized Magnetofection
Using Peptide-Mediated Non-Viral Gene Delivery Based on Iron Oxide
Nanoparticles. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.0c02465