Poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers are promising multipotent gene delivery vectors, providing favorable DNA condensation properties also in combination with the possibility of conjugation of different targeting ligands to their surface. They have been used for transfection both in vitro and in vivo, but their application is currently somewhat limited due to inherent cytotoxicity. In this work we investigate how two types of surface modification, acetylation and PEGylation, affect the DNA binding characteristics, the cytotoxicity and the in vitro transfection efficiency of generation 4 and 5 PAMAM dendrimers. Particularly, we address how the morphology of DNA-dendrimer complexes, formed under low salt conditions, changes upon dilution in cell growth medium, an event that inevitably occurs before the complexes reach the cell surface in any transfection experiment. We find that acetylation and PEGylation essentially eliminates the inherent dendrimer cytotoxicity. However, the transfection efficiency of the modified dendrimers is lower than that of the corresponding unmodified dendrimers, which can be rationally understood by our observations that DNA is less condensed when complexed with these modified dendrimers. Although small DNA-dendrimer particles are formed, the availability for ethidium intercalation and nuclease degradation is significantly higher in the modified DNA-dendrimer complexes than in unmodified ones. Dilution in cell growth medium has a drastic effect on these electrostatically assembled complexes, resulting in increase in size and DNA availability. Our results strongly add to the notion that it is of importance to perform a biophysical characterization under conditions as close to the transfection situation as possible, to enable conclusions regarding structure-activity relations of gene delivery vectors.
Electrostatic shielding and steric blocking by histones are two significant factors that participate in the control of the local rates of transcription in chromatin. As a simple model system to determine how the degree of DNA condensation affects enzyme accessibility and gene expression, we have used generation 5 polyamidoamine (G5 PAMAM) cationic dendrimer particles (size 5.4 nm) as a synthetic histone model together with an in vitro transcription assay. The degree of compaction, conformation, and binding availability of the dendrimer-DNA complexes is characterized by linear and circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, and competitive binding of ethidium. Using ultracentrifugation we are able to show explicitly, for the first time, that dendrimer particles bind to DNA in a highly cooperative manner, and that the dendrimer-induced condensation of the DNA strongly attenuates transcription. Two fractions with different properties can be identified: a low-density fraction which behaves very similar to uncondensed DNA and a high-density fraction which is condensed to a high extent and where binding availability and transcription are strongly reduced. Circular dichroism gives clues to the structure of the condensed DNA indicating long-range order between the helices such as in polymer-salt-induced cholesteric liquid crystalline domains, one possible shape being a toroidal structure. On the basis of the experimental data, we propose a model for the self-assembly of the dendrimer-DNA system.
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