Abstract
Cationic liposomes (CLs) are used as gene vectors (carriers) in worldwide human clinical trials of non-viral gene therapy. These lipid-gene complexes have the potential of transferring large pieces of DNA of up to 1 million base-pairs into cells. As our understanding of the mechanisms of action of CL-DNA complexes remains poor, transfection efficiencies are still low when compared to gene delivery with viral vectors. We describe recent studies with a combination of techniques (synchrotron x-ray diffraction for structure determination, laser-scanning confocal microscopy to probe the interactions of CL-DNA particles with cells, and luciferase reporter-gene expression assays to measure transfection efficiencies in mammalian cells), which collectively are beginning to unravel the relationship between the distinctly structured CL-DNA complexes and their transfection efficiency. The work described here is applicable to transfection optimization in ex vivo cell transfection, where cells are removed and returned to patients after transfection. CL-DNA complexes primarily form a multilayered sandwich structure with DNA layered between the cationic lipids (labeled Lα C). On rare occasions, an inverted hexagonal structure with DNA encapsulated in lipid tubules (labeled HII C) is observed. A major recent insight is that for Lα C complexes the membrane charge density σM of the CL-vector, rather than the charge of the cationic lipid alone, is a key universal parameter that governs the transfection efficiency of Lα C complexes in cells. The parameter σM is a measure of the average charge per unit area of the membrane, thus taking into account the amount of neutral lipids. In contrast to Lα C complexes, HII C complexes containing the lipid 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerophosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) exhibit no dependence on ?M. The current limiting factor to transfection by cationic lipid vectors appears to be the tight association of a fraction of the delivered exogenous DNA with cationic cellular molecules, which may prevent optimal transcriptional activity. Future directions are outlined, which make use of surface-functionalized CL-DNA complexes suitable for transfection in vivo.
Keywords: gene therapy, gene delivery, nonviral, small-angle x-ray scattering, multivalent, cationic liposomes, lipofection
Current Medicinal Chemistry
Title: Cationic Lipid-DNA Complexes for Gene Therapy: Understanding the Relationship Between Complex Structure and Gene Delivery Pathways at the Molecular Level
Volume: 11 Issue: 2
Author(s): Kai Ewert, Nelle L. Slack, Ayesha Ahmad, Heather M. Evans, Alison J. Lin, Charles E. Samuel and Cyrus R. Safinya
Affiliation:
Keywords: gene therapy, gene delivery, nonviral, small-angle x-ray scattering, multivalent, cationic liposomes, lipofection
Abstract: Cationic liposomes (CLs) are used as gene vectors (carriers) in worldwide human clinical trials of non-viral gene therapy. These lipid-gene complexes have the potential of transferring large pieces of DNA of up to 1 million base-pairs into cells. As our understanding of the mechanisms of action of CL-DNA complexes remains poor, transfection efficiencies are still low when compared to gene delivery with viral vectors. We describe recent studies with a combination of techniques (synchrotron x-ray diffraction for structure determination, laser-scanning confocal microscopy to probe the interactions of CL-DNA particles with cells, and luciferase reporter-gene expression assays to measure transfection efficiencies in mammalian cells), which collectively are beginning to unravel the relationship between the distinctly structured CL-DNA complexes and their transfection efficiency. The work described here is applicable to transfection optimization in ex vivo cell transfection, where cells are removed and returned to patients after transfection. CL-DNA complexes primarily form a multilayered sandwich structure with DNA layered between the cationic lipids (labeled Lα C). On rare occasions, an inverted hexagonal structure with DNA encapsulated in lipid tubules (labeled HII C) is observed. A major recent insight is that for Lα C complexes the membrane charge density σM of the CL-vector, rather than the charge of the cationic lipid alone, is a key universal parameter that governs the transfection efficiency of Lα C complexes in cells. The parameter σM is a measure of the average charge per unit area of the membrane, thus taking into account the amount of neutral lipids. In contrast to Lα C complexes, HII C complexes containing the lipid 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerophosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) exhibit no dependence on ?M. The current limiting factor to transfection by cationic lipid vectors appears to be the tight association of a fraction of the delivered exogenous DNA with cationic cellular molecules, which may prevent optimal transcriptional activity. Future directions are outlined, which make use of surface-functionalized CL-DNA complexes suitable for transfection in vivo.
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Cite this article as:
Ewert Kai, Slack L. Nelle, Ahmad Ayesha, Evans M. Heather, Lin J. Alison, Samuel E. Charles and Safinya R. Cyrus, Cationic Lipid-DNA Complexes for Gene Therapy: Understanding the Relationship Between Complex Structure and Gene Delivery Pathways at the Molecular Level, Current Medicinal Chemistry 2004; 11 (2) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867043456160
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867043456160 |
Print ISSN 0929-8673 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1875-533X |
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