3.8 Article

Efficiency of Cytosolic Delivery with Poly(β-amino ester) Nanoparticles is Dependent on the Effective pKa of the Polymer

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 3411-3421

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.0c00271

Keywords

nanoparticle; gene delivery; poly(beta-amino ester); polyethylenimine; endosome; pK(a)

Funding

  1. NSF [DGE-0707427]
  2. NIH [R01CA228133, R01EB022148, S10OD016374, P41EB028239, P30EY001765]
  3. Hopkins Office of Undergraduate Research
  4. Bloomberg-Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy

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The mechanism by which cationic polymers containing titratable amines mediate effective endosomal escape and cytosolic delivery of nucleic acids is not well understood despite the decades of research devoted to these materials. Here, we utilize multiple assays investigating the endosomal escape step associated with plasmid delivery by polyethylenimine (PEI) and poly(beta-amino esters) (PBAEs) to improve the understanding of how these cationic polymers enable gene delivery. To probe the role of these materials in facilitating endosomal escape, we utilized vesicle membrane leakage and extracellular pH modulation assays to demonstrate the influence of polymer buffering capacity and effective pK(a) on the delivery of the plasmid DNA. Our results demonstrate that transfection with PBAEs is highly sensitive to the effective pK(a) of the overall polymer, which has broad implications for transfection. In more acidic environments, PBAE-mediated transfection was inhibited, while PEI was relatively unaffected. In neutral to basic environments, PBAEs have high buffering capacities that led to dramatically improved transfection efficacy. The cellular uptake of polymeric nanoparticles overall was unchanged as a function of pH, indicating that microenvironmental acidity was important for downstream intracellular delivery efficiency. Overall, this study motivates the use of polymer chemical characteristics, such as effective pK(a) values, to more efficiently evaluate new polymeric materials for enhanced intracellular delivery characteristics.

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