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A dimerizable cationic lipid with potential for gene delivery

Authors :
Sandra Ristori
Elisa Vicenzi
Mariasara Cabras
Daniele Pezzoli
Carlo Sala
Anna Kajaste-Rudnitski
Matteo Zanda
Gabriele Candiani
Cinzia Pellegrini
Source :
The journal of gene medicine 10 (2008): 637–645., info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Candiani G., Pezzoli D., Cabras M., Ristori S., Pellegrini C., Kajaste-Rudnitski A., Vicenzi E., Sala C., Zanda M./titolo:A dimerizable cationic lipid with potential for gene delivery/doi:/rivista:The journal of gene medicine/anno:2008/pagina_da:637/pagina_a:645/intervallo_pagine:637–645/volume:10
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Background Despite the use of currently optimized lipofection conditions, including transfection in serum-depleted media, the efficiency of gene transfer is low and high transfection rates often induce cytotoxicity. A lipid formulation with transfection efficiency not inhibited by serum would provide an advance towards in vivo applications. Methods We explored the ability of the cationic lipid SH-14 to dimerize upon DNA and form lipoplexes, and potentially release nucleic acids in the intracellular reducing milieu. We investigated the critical micelle-forming concentration of SH-14 and its intrinsic toxicity, size and Zeta potential measurements, the in vitro cytotoxicity of SH-14/plasmid DNA lipoplexes and their ability to transfect cells. Results Among all the charge ratios (CR, + /−) tested, lipoplexes at CR 10 with a mean diameter of 295 nm and a surface charge of + 20 mV, exhibited the best compromise between transfection efficiency and tolerability. SH-14 presented the same cytotoxicity level whether alone or complexed in lipoplexes. Lipofections carried out in serum-free medium shared a transfection efficiency, on average, of 40% and a cytotoxicity of 38%. An increase of 73% in transfection efficiency and 24% in cell viability were obtained, extending lipofection over 48 h in complete-medium. Moreover, when serum concentration was increased from 10% to 50%, a three-fold increase in plasmid dose led to more than 72% of cells being transfected with almost no sign of cytotoxicity. Conclusions Overall, SH-14 presents good potential as a novel transfection reagent to be used in the presence of serum. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

ISSN :
15212254
Volume :
10
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of gene medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45e81a30307a77fc68014d21544f3682