4.8 Article

Relationships between chemical composition, physical properties and transfection efficiency of polysaccharide-spermine conjugates

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 1646-1655

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2005.09.005

Keywords

gene delivery; dextran; fluorescence; proton sponge

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Biodegradable water-soluble polysaccharicle-spermine (SPM) polycation conjugates for nucleic acid delivery were synthesized by oxidizing polysaccharides using potassium periodate, followed by SPM conjugation. The polycations differ in their polysaccharide type, arabinogalactan (AG) or dextran (D), and/or in the IO4-/saccharide mole ratio used for polysaccharide oxidation (1:1, 1:3, or 1:5), resulting in either D(1:1)-SPM, AG(1:1)-SPM, D(1:3)-SPM, AG(1:3)-SPM, or AG(1:5)-SPM. Chemical structure of the conjugates was characterized for total nitrogen and primary amino groups. Surface pH and electrical surface potential were determined by means of spectral changes of covalently attached 7-hydroxycoumarin (HC, a pH- and electrical surface potential-sensitive fluorophore). The binding and the electrostatic neutralization of the polycations by plasmid DNA, as well as the relationship between chemical structure, physical parameters, and transfection of NlH3T3 cells, were also studied. D(1:1)-SPM, the only polycation that showed efficient cell transfection in culture, was shown to have: (1) high SPM content (2000 nmol/mg); (2) high levels of cross-linked SPM (39-51 %); (3) at DNA P-/NH3+ ratio of 2.0, a plateau in neutralization of cationic groups (+ 48 mV, as determined by HC-labeled D(1: 1)-SPM titration with DNA), and a drop in zeta-potential from + 42mV for the polymer alone to 0 mV for the polyplex, suggesting that some of the charges are hidden from the DNA; (4) pH(surface) value of 9.2, suggesting that at physiological bulk pH the polymer is only partially ionized, and therefore can act as a proton sponge in the endosome; and (5) high sensitivity to serum-rich growth medium. An oleyl derivative, N-oleyl-dextran-spermine (ODS), was synthesized and demonstrated improved transfection efficiency in serum-rich medium. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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