4.8 Article

Endosomal Size and Membrane Leakiness Influence Proton Sponge-Based Rupture of Endosomal Vesicles

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 2332-2345

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07583

Keywords

gene therapy; nanomedicine; polyethylenimine; endosomal escape; proton sponge effect

Funding

  1. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology in Belgium
  2. Ghent University Special Research Fund
  3. Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO, Belgium)
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [648214]
  5. Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) [115363]

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In gene therapy, endosomal escape represents a major bottleneck since nanoparticles often remain entrapped inside endosomes and are trafficked toward the lysosomes for degradation. A detailed understanding of the endosomal barrier would be beneficial for developing rational strategies to improve transfection and endosomal escape. By visualizing individual endosomal escape events in live cells, we obtain insight into mechanistic factors that influence proton sponge-based endosomal escape. In a comparative study, we found that HeLa cells treated with JetPEI/pDNA polyplexes have a 3.5-fold increased endosomal escape frequency compared to ARPE-19 cells. We found that endosomal size has a major impact on the escape capacity. The smaller HeLa endosomes are more easily ruptured by the proton sponge effect than the larger ARPE-19 endosomes, a finding supported by a mathematical model based on the underlying physical principles. Still, it remains intriguing that even in the small HeLa endosomes, <10% of the polyplex-containing endosomes show endosomal escape. Further experiments revealed that the membrane of polyplex-containing endosomes becomes leaky to small compounds, preventing effective buildup of osmotic pressure, which in turn prevents endosomal rupture. Analysis of H1299 and A549 cells revealed that endosomal size determines endosomal escape efficiency when cells have comparable membrane leakiness. However, at high levels of membrane leakiness, buildup of osmotic pressure is no longer possible, regardless of endosomal size. Based on our findings that both endosomal size and membrane leakiness have a high impact on proton sponge-based endosomal rupture, we provide important clues toward further improvement of this escape strategy.

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