4.7 Article

Reiterated Targeting Peptides on the Nanoparticle Surface Significantly Promote Targeted Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Gene Delivery to Stem Cells

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages 3897-3903

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.5b01226

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CA200504, CA195607]
  2. National Science Foundation [CMMI-1234957, CBET-1512664]
  3. Department of Defense office of the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs [W81XWH-15-1-0180]
  4. Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research [434003]
  5. Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology [HR14-160]
  6. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LZ12C17001]
  7. Projects of Zhejiang Provincial Science and Technology Plans [2012C12910]
  8. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21172194]
  9. Silkworm Industry Science and Technology Innovation Team [2011R50028]
  10. National High Technology Research and Development Program 863 [2013AA102507]

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Nonviral gene delivery vectors hold great promise for gene therapy due to the safety concerns with viral vectors. However, the application of nonviral vectors is hindered by their low transfection efficiency. Herein, in order to tackle this challenge, we developed a nonviral vector integrating lipids, sleeping beauty transposon system and 8-mer stem cell targeting peptides for safe and efficient gene delivery to hard-to-transfect mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). The 8-mer MSC-targeting peptides, when synthetically reiterated in three folds and chemically presented on the surface, significantly promoted the resultant lipid-based nanopartides (LBNs) to deliver VEGF gene into MSCs with a high transfection efficiency (similar to 52%) and long-lasting gene expression (for longer than 170 h) when compared to nonreiterated peptides. However, the reiterated stem cell targeting peptides do not enable the highly efficient gene transfer to other control cells. This work suggests that the surface presentation of the reiterated stem cell-targeting peptides on the nonviral vectors is a promising method for improving the efficiency of cell-specific nonviral gene transfection in stem cells.

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