Title of article
Lactosylated lipid calcium phosphate-based nanoparticles: A promising approach for efficient DNA delivery to hepatocytes
Author/Authors
Khalifeh ، Masoomeh Department of Medical Biotechnology and Nanotechnology - Faculty of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Badiee ، Ali Department of Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology - School of Pharmacy - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Ramezanian ، Navid Department of Chemistry - Faculty of Science - Ferdowsi University of Mashhad , Sahebkar ، Amirhossein Applied Biomedical Research Center - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Farahpour ، Atena Department of Chemistry - Faculty of Science - Ferdowsi University of Mashhad , Kazemi Oskuee ، Reza Department of Medical Biotechnology and Nanotechnology - Faculty of Medicine, Applied Biomedical Research Center, Targeted Drug Delivery Research Center - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
From page
952
To page
958
Abstract
Objective(s): For safe and effective gene therapy, the ability to deliver the therapeutic nucleic acid to the target sites is crucial. In this study, lactosylated lipid phosphate calcium nanoparticles (lac-LCP) were developed for targeted delivery of pDNA to the hepatocyte cells. The lac-LCP formulation contained lactose-modified cholesterol (CHL), a ligand that binds to the asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGR) expressed on hepatocytes, and polyethyleneimine (PEI) in the core. Materials and Methods: Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were used to monitor the chemical modification, and the physicochemical properties of NPs were studied using dynamic light scattering (DLS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). To evaluate transfection efficiency, cellular uptake and GFP expression were assessed using fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. Results: The results revealed that lactose-targeted particles (lac-LCP) had a significant increase in cellular uptake by hepatocytes. The inclusion of a low molecular weight PEI (1.8 KDa) with a low PEI/pDNA ratio of 1 in the core of LCP, elicited high degrees of GFP protein expression (by 5 and 6-fold), which exhibited significantly higher efficiency than PEI 1.8 KDa and Lipofectamine. Conclusion: The successful functionalization and nuclear delivery of LCP NPs described here indicate its promise as an efficient delivery vector to hepatocyte nuclei.
Keywords
Calcium Phosphates , DNA delivery , Hepatocytes , Nanoparticle , Polyethylenimine
Journal title
Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences
Journal title
Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences
Record number
2759832
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