A series of novel bioreducible poly(amido amine)s containing multiple disulfide linkages (SS-PAAs) were synthesized and evaluated as nonviral gene vectors. These linear SS-PAAs could be easily obtained by Michael-type polyaddition of various primary amines to the disulfide-containing cystamine bisacrylamide. The SS-PAA polymers are relatively stable in medium mimicking physiological conditions (pH 7.4, 150 mM PBS, 37 degrees C), but are rapidly degraded in the presence of 2.5 mM DTT, mimicking the intracellular reductive environment (pH 7.4, [R-SH] = 5 mM, 37 degrees C). The polymers efficiently condense DNA into nanoscaled (<200 nm) and positively charged (>+20 mV) polyplexes that are stable under neutral conditions but are rapidly destabilized in a reductive environment, as was revealed by both dynamic light scatting measurement and agarose gel assays. Moreover, most of the poly(amido amine)s possess buffer capacities in the pH range pH 7.4-5.1 that are even higher than polyethylenimine (pEI), a property that may favorably contribute to the endosomal escape of the polyplexes. Polyplexes of four of the seven SS-PAAs studied were able to transfect COS-7 cells in vitro with transfection efficiencies significantly higher than those of branched pEI, being one of the most effective polymeric gene carriers reported to date. Importantly, also in the presence of serum, a high level of gene expression could be observed when the incubation time was elongated from 1 h to 4 h. XTT assays showed that SS-PAAs and their polyplexes possess essentially no or only very low cytotoxicity at concentrations where the highest transfection activity is observed. The results indicate that bioreducible poly(amido amine)s have excellent properties for the development of highly potent and nontoxic polymeric gene carriers.
Brushed polymers composed of a backbone of poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (pHEMA) onto which poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate)s (pDMAEMAs) was grafted via a hydrolyzable linker were synthesized and evaluated as nonviral gene delivery vectors. Both pDMAEMA and pHEMA polymers with controlled molecular weights and narrow distributions were synthesized by controlled atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). The azide initiator was used to ensure complete and monoazide functionalization of the pDMAEMA polymer chains. Click reaction between pHEMA with alkyne side groups and the azide end group in the pDMAEMA resulted in a high-molecular-weight polymer composed of low-molecular-weight constituents via an easily degradable carbonate ester linker. The length of the pDMAEMA grafts as well as the number of grafts of the brushed pHEMA-pDMAEMA can be easily varied. At physiological conditions (pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C), the brushed polymer degraded by hydrolysis of the carbonate ester with a half-life of 96 h. The molecular weights of the formed degradation products was very close to that of the starting pDMAEMA, which is likely below the renal excretion limit (<30 kDa). It was shown that the degradable brushed pHEMA-pDMAEMAs were able to condense plasmid DNA into positively charged nanosized particles. The resulting polyplexes were able to transfect cells efficiently in the presence of the endosomal membrane disrupting INF-7 peptide, and all these degradable polymers showed lower cellular toxicity compared to a high-molecular-weight pDMAEMA reference. On the other hand, the low-molecular-weight pDMAEMA used for the grafting to pHEMA was neither able to condense the structure of DNA nor able to transfect cells. This study demonstrates that grafting a low-molecular-weight cationic polymer via a hydrolyzable linker to a neutral hydrophilic polymer is an effective approach to modulate the transfection activity and toxicity profile of gene delivery polymers.
Novel ABA triblock copolymers consisting of low molecular weight linear polyethylenimine (PEI) as the A block and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) as the B block were prepared and evaluated as polymeric transfectant. The cationic polymerization of 2-methyl-2-oxazoline (MeOZO) using PEG-bis(tosylate) as a macroinitiator followed by acid hydrolysis afforded linear PEI-PEG-PEI triblock copolymers with controlled compositions. Two copolymers, PEI-PEG-PEI 2100-3400-2100 and 4000-3400-4000, were synthesized. Both copolymers were shown to interact with and condense plasmid DNA effectively to give polymer/DNA complexes (polyplexes) of small sizes (<100 nm) and moderate zeta-potentials (approximately +10 mV) at polymer/plasmid weight ratios > or =1.5/1. These polyplexes were able to efficiently transfect COS-7 cells and primary bovine endothelial cells (BAECs) in vitro. For example, PEI-PEG-PEI 4000-3400-4000 based polyplexes showed a transfection efficiency comparable to polyplexes of branched PEI 25000. The transfection activity of polyplexes of PEI-PEG-PEI 4000-3400-4000 in BAECs using luciferase as a reporter gene was 3-fold higher than that for linear PEI 25000/DNA formulations. Importantly, the presence of serum in the transfection medium had no inhibitive effect on the transfection activity of the PEI-PEG-PEI polyplexes. These PEI-PEG-PEI triblock copolymers displayed also an improved safety profile in comparison with high molecular weight PEIs, since the cytotoxicity of the polyplex formulations was very low under conditions where high transgene expression was found. Therefore, linear PEI-PEG-PEI triblock copolymers are an attractive novel class of nonviral gene delivery systems.
A cationic polymethacrylate with a guanidinium side group was designed in order to create a polymer with cell membrane-penetrating properties such as Tat or other arginine-rich peptides. The polymer, poly(3-guanidinopropyl methacrylate), abbreviated as pGuaMA, was synthesized by free radical polymerization. The DNA-condensing properties of pGuaMA (Mw 180 kDa) were investigated via dynamic light scattering and zeta potential measurements, and small, positively charged particles (110 nm, +37 mV) were found. It was shown that polyplexes based on pGuaMA were able to transfect COS-7 cells efficiently in the absence of serum, while under the same conditions poly(arginine) (pArg) polyplexes did not show detectable transfection levels. Addition of a membrane-disrupting peptide, INF 7, derived from the influenza virus, to preformed pGuaMA polyplexes did result in approximately 2 times increased transfection levels. DLS, zeta potential measurements, gel electrophoresis, and ethidium bromide displacement measurements indicated that serum induced aggregation of the polyplexes at high polymer/plasmid ratios, while at low polymer/plasmid ratios the polarity of the polyplexes reversed likely due to adsorption of negatively charged proteins on their surface. Likely, the unfavorable interactions of pGuaMA polyplexes with serum proteins is the reason for the absent transfection activity of these polyplexes in the presence of serum. Confocal laser scanning microscopy indicated cellular internalization via endocytosis of both polyplexes and free polymer. Thus, pGuaMA polyplexes enter cells, as reported for other polyplexes, by endocytosis and not, as hypothesized, via direct membrane passage.
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