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Research Article

Gelucire-stabilized nanoparticles as a potential DNA delivery system

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Pages 647-654 | Received 31 Jan 2015, Accepted 08 Apr 2015, Published online: 27 Apr 2015
 

Abstract

Clinical viability of gene delivery systems has been greatly impacted by potential toxicity of the delivery systems. Recently, we reported the nanoparticle (NP) preparation process that employs biocompatible materials such as Gelucire® 44/14 and cetyl alcohol as matrix materials. In the current study, the NP preparation was modified for pDNA loading through: (i) inclusion of cationic lipids (DOTAP or DDAB) with NP matrix materials; or (ii) application of cationic surfactants (CTAB) to generate NPs with desired surface charges for pDNA complexation. Colloidal stability and efficiency of loading pGL3-DR4X2-luciferase plasmid DNA in NPs were verified by gel permeation chromatography. Compared to pDNA alone, all the NPs were effective in preserving pDNA from digestion by DNase. While pDNA loading using CTAB-NPs involved fewer steps compared to DOTAP-NPs and DDAB-NPs, CTAB-NPs were greatly impacted by elevated cytotoxicity level which could be ascribed to the concentrations of CTAB in NP formulations. In vitro transfection studies (in HepG2 cells) based on luciferase expression showed the ranking of cell transfection efficiency as DOTAP-NPs > DDAB-NPs > CTAB-NPs. The overall work provided an initial assessment of gelucire-stabilized NPs as a potential platform for gene delivery.

Declaration of interest

The research was supported by NEOMED. Authors do not have personal and/or financial conflict of interest.

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