Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9918668 | International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A multifunctional envelope-type nano device (MEND) for use in the delivery of siRNA expression plasmids is described. The plasmid DNA encoding anti-luciferase short interfering RNA (siRNA) was condensed by poly-l-lysine (PLL) and packaged into the MEND. The silencing effect of the MEND(PLL) showed a 96% inhibition of luciferase activities in a co-transfection study. The silencing effect was maintained at more than 60%, even under the 100-fold diluted conditions. In the luciferase transformed cells, however, the MEND(PLL) showed no significant silencing effect (10%), indicating heterogeneity in transfection by the MEND(PLL). To solve this problem, the DNA condensing agents were optimized by comparing PLL, stearyl octaarginine (STR-R8) and protamine (Prot). No difference in silencing effect (95-97%) was found among these MENDs in a co-transfection study. However, the MEND(Prot) showed a 70% silencing effect in the transformed cells. These results suggest that the MEND(Prot) has less heterogeneity in transfection, while the MEND(PLL) and the MEND(STR-R8) have large heterogeneities. These results demonstrate that MEND(Prot) is a promising gene delivery system for siRNA expression plasmids with less heterogeneity associated with the transfection.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Pharmaceutical Science
Authors
Rumiko Moriguchi, Kentaro Kogure, Hidetaka Akita, Shiroh Futaki, Makoto Miyagishi, Kazunari Taira, Hideyoshi Harashima,