IIBBA   05544
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOQUIMICAS DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Enhancement of nucleic acid delivery to hard-to-transfect human colorectal cancer cells by magnetofection at laminin coated substrates and promotion of the endosomal/lysosomal escape
Autor/es:
MARIA BELEN CERDA; MILENA BATALLA; MARTINA ANTON; EDUARDO G CAFFERATA; OSVALDO L. PODHAJCER; CHRISTIAN PLANK; OLGA MYKHAYLYK; LUCIA POLICASTRO
Revista:
RSC Advances
Editorial:
Royal Society of Chemistry
Referencias:
Año: 2015 vol. 5 p. 58345 - 58354
ISSN:
2046-2069
Resumen:
Despite a great diversity of nanomaterials, such as cationic lipid, polymers or inorganic nanoparticles, has been developed in order to carry nucleic acids across plasma membrane, these methodologies have still insufficient efficacy in cells named hard-to-transfect cells, as the colorectal HT29 and Caco-2 cell lines. This paper describes the improvement of plasmid DNA (pDNA) and small interfering RNA (siRNA) transfer in these cells through the combination of magnetofection, a simplified extracellular matrix of laminin and endosomal/lysosomal escape promotion using the endosome-disruptive peptide INF-7. Magnetofection of pDNA complexes using selected vector formulations resulted in up to 2-fold enhancement in luciferase expression, as compared to lipofection. Further enhance in pDNA transfer in HT29 cells was obtained when magnetofection was applied on cells grown on laminin coated substrates, increasing 6-fold the luciferase expression compared to lipofection at uncoated substrates. This technique was also applied to siRNA delivery in cells expressing stably luciferase (Caco-2Luc and HT29Luc), selected magnetic vector formulations resulted in 61±5% and 50±5% of luciferase silencing in HT29Luc and Caco-2Luc, respectively. Further improvement in reporter gene silencing was obtained when the magnetic complexes were modified with INF-7, reaching more than 95% of luciferase silencing in Caco-2Luc cells, while pre-treatment of HT29Luc cells by chloroquine resulted in 80±4% of down regulation of luciferase expression. Thus, magnetofection applied on cells grown over laminin coated substrates and the optimization of endosomal escape of magnetic complexes would be a good alternative to enhance nucleic acid transfer in hard-to-transfect colorectal cancer cells.