Novel endosomolytic peptides for enhancing gene delivery in nanoparticles.
Ahmad. Aqeel A; Ranjan. Sanjeev S; Zhang. Weikai W; Zou. Jing J; Pyykkö. Ilmari I; Kinnunen. Paavo K J PK
Key Findings
- LL‑37 analogs become membrane‑disruptive at pH 5.0 (endosomal pH) but are harmless at normal body pH.
- When combined with a lipid bilayer and a DNA‑condensing protein, the peptides form 150‑300 nm nanoparticles that are monodisperse.
- These nanoparticles achieve gene expression levels similar to Lipofectamine 2000 while avoiding the large, uneven aggregates typical of that reagent.
Practical Outcomes
- For most DIY health enthusiasts, this work doesn’t translate into a usable supplement or protocol. It shows a potential route for safer, more consistent gene‑delivery particles, but applying it would require advanced lab skills, equipment, and regulatory clearance.
Summary
Scientists made a new version of the LL‑37 peptide that only punches holes in cell membranes when the environment is acidic, like inside endosomes. They mixed this peptide into tiny lipid‑coated particles that carry DNA, and these particles delivered genes into cells as well as a common lab reagent (Lipofectamine) but formed more uniform, stable particles.
Abstract
Trapping in the endosomes is currently believed to represent the main barrier for transfection. Peptides, which allow endosomal escape have been demonstrated to overcome this barrier, similarly to the entry of viruses. However, the design principles of such endosomolytic peptides remain unclear. We characterized three analogs derived from membrane disrupting antimicrobial peptides (AMP), viz. LL-37, melittin, and bombolitin V, with glutamic acid substituting for all basic residues. These analogs are pH-sensitive and cause negligible membrane permeabilization and insignificant cytotoxicity at pH7.4. However, at pH5.0, prevailing in endosomes, membrane binding and hemolysis of human erythrocytes become evident. We first condensed the emerald green fluorescent protein (emGFP) containing plasmid by protamine, yielding 115 nm diameter soluble nanoplexes. For coating of the nanoplex surface with a lipid bilayer we introduced a hydrophobic tether, stearyl-octa-arginine (SR8). The indicated peptides were dissolved in methanol and combined with lipid mixtures in chloroform, followed by drying at RT under a nitrogen flow. The dry residues were hydrated with nanoplexes in Hepes, pH7.4 yielding after a 30 min incubation at RT,rather monodisperse nanoparticles having an average diameter of 150-300 nm, measured by DLS and cryo-TEM. Studies with cell cultures showed the above peptides to yield expression levels comparable to those obtained using Lipofectamine 2000. However, unlike the polydisperse aggregates formed upon mixing Lipofectamine 2000 and plasmid, the procedure described yields soluble, and reasonably monodisperse nanoparticles, which can be expected to be suitable for gene delivery in vivo, using intravenous injection.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-11-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbamem.2014.11.008
47
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