Issue 1, 2010

Poly(methyl methacrylate)-graft-oligoamines as low cytotoxic and efficient nonviral gene vectors

Abstract

A series of poly(methyl methacrylate)-graft-oligoamines (PMMA-g-oligoamines), including PMMA-g-DETA, PMMA-g-TETA and PMMA-g-TEPA, were synthesized through aminolysis of the PMMA with diethylenetriamine, triethylenetetramine and tetraethylenepentamine. Agarose gel retardation assay indicated that PMMA-g-oligoamines had good binding capability with plasmidDNA, and the binding capability increased with increasing length of oligoamines and content of nitrogen (N%). The results of particle size, zeta potential and morphology observation further showed that the PMMA-g-oligoamines could condense DNA efficiently and the PMMA-g-oligoamine/DNA complexes were uniform nanospheres. The in vitro cell viability indicated that PMMA-g-oligoamines were less toxic than 25 kDa PEI, though the cytotoxicity of PMMA-g-oligoamines increased slightly with increasing length of oligoamines as well as the N% of PMMA-g-oligoamines. The transfection efficiency of PMMA-g-oligoamines/DNA complexes in 293 T and HeLa cells demonstrated that PMMA-g-oligoamines could transfect cells efficiently with increasing the length of oligoamines, especially PMMA-g-TEPA with highest N%, and showed similar transfection capability as 25 kDa PEI. The cellular uptake study showed that the distribution of YOYO-1 labeled DNA in the cytoplasm and nuclei increased gradually with increasing length of oligoamines.

Graphical abstract: Poly(methyl methacrylate)-graft-oligoamines as low cytotoxic and efficient nonviral gene vectors

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Jul 2009
Accepted
08 Sep 2009
First published
06 Oct 2009

Mol. BioSyst., 2010,6, 256-263

Poly(methyl methacrylate)-graft-oligoamines as low cytotoxic and efficient nonviral gene vectors

Y. Wang, Y. Sun, X. Hong, X. Zhang and G. Zhang, Mol. BioSyst., 2010, 6, 256 DOI: 10.1039/B915718B

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