4.7 Article

New insights on the mechanism of polyethylenimine transfection and their implications on gene therapy and DNA vaccines

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出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2021.112219

关键词

Polyethylenimine; Pore formation; Mimicking nuclear membranes; DNA vectors; Molecular dynamics simulations

资金

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [PID2019-109517RB-I00]

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Polyethylenimine (PEI) has a strong affinity with cell membranes, which sheds light on its mechanism of DNA release. PEI alone cannot enter the cell nucleus but forms a peripheral aureole. The hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions between PEI and lipidic layers allow it to intercalate through the model membranes. This understanding can contribute to the development of better gene therapy and DNA vaccines.
Polyethylenimine (PEI) has been demonstrated as an efficient DNA delivery vehicle both in vitro and in vivo. There is a consensus that PEI-DNA complexes enter the cells by endocytosis and escape from endosomes by the so-called proton sponge effect. However, little is known on how and where the polyplexes are de-complexed for DNA transcription and replication to occur inside the cell nucleus. To better understand this issue, we (i) tracked the cell internalization of PEI upon transfection to human epithelial cells and (ii) studied the interaction of PEI with phospholipidic layers mimicking nuclear membranes. Both the biological and physicochemical experiments provided evidence of a strong binding affinity between PEI and the lipidic bilayer. Firstly, confocal microscopy revealed that PEI alone could not penetrate the cell nucleus; instead, it arranged throughout the cytoplasm and formed a sort of aureole surrounding the nuclei periphery. Secondly, surface tension measurements, fluorescence dye leakage assays, and differential scanning calorimetry demonstrated that a combination of hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions between PEI and the phospholipidic monolayers/bilayers led to the formation of stable defects along the model membranes, allowing the intercalation of PEI through the monolayer/bilayer structure. Results are also supported by molecular dynamics simulation of the pore formation in PEI-lipidic bilayers. As discussed throughout the text, these results might shed light on a the mechanism in which the interaction between PEI and the nucleus membrane might play an active role on the DNA release: on the one hand, the PEImembrane interaction is anticipated to facilitate the DNA disassembly from the polyplex by establishing a competition with DNA for the PEI binding and on the other hand, the forming defects are expected to serve as channels for the entrance of de-complexed DNA into the cell nucleus. A better understanding of the mechanism of transfection of cationic polymers opens paths to development of more efficiency vectors to improve gene therapy treatment and the new generation of DNA vaccines.

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