4.8 Article

Effect of Polyplex Morphology on Cellular Uptake, Intracellular Trafficking, and Transgene Expression

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages 10612-10620

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn403069n

Keywords

particle morphology; polyplexes; nucleic acid delivery; lysine peptides; HPMA

Funding

  1. NIH/NINDS [1R01NS064404]
  2. Center for the Intracellular Delivery of Biologics through the Washington Life Sciences Discovery Fund [2496490]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-0718124]
  4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute/UW Molecular Medicine Graduate Student Scholarship
  5. Mary Gates Undergraduate Research Fellowship

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Nanoparticle morphology has been shown to affect cellular uptake, but there are few studies investigating the impact of particle shape on biologic drug delivery. Recently, our group synthesized a series of N-(2-hydroxypropyl) methacrylamide (HPMA)-oligolysine brush polymers for nucleic acid delivery that varied in oligolysine peptide length and polymer molecular weight. Interestingly, a 50% longer peptide (K-15) transfected very poorly compared to the optimized polymer comprised of K-10 peptide despite similar chemical composition and molecular weight. We hypothesized that differences in particle morphology contributed to the differences in plasmid DNA delivery. We found that particles formed with plasmid DNA and a polymer with the longer oligolysine peptide (pHK15) had larger aspect ratios than particles formed with optimized polymer (pHK10). Even though both formulations showed similar percentages of cellular association, particles of a higher aspect ratio were internalized to a lesser extent. Furthermore, the rodlike particles accumulated more in endosomal/lysosomal compartments, leading to delayed nuclear delivery. Other parameters, such as particle surface charge, unpackaging ability, uptake mechanism, intracellular trafficking, and the presence of heparan sulfate proteoglycans did not significantly differ between the two polymer formulations. These results indicate that, for this system, polyplex morphology primarily impacts nucleic acid delivery efficiency through differences in cellular internalization rates.

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