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Title: Surface functionalized cationic lipid-DNA complexes for gene delivery: PEGylated lamellar complexes exhibit distinct DNA-DNA interaction regimes. Author: Martin-Herranz A, Ahmad A, Evans HM, Ewert K, Schulze U, Safinya CR. Journal: Biophys J; 2004 Feb; 86(2):1160-8. PubMed ID: 14747350. Abstract: Cationic lipid-DNA (CL-DNA) complexes are abundantly used in nonviral gene therapy clinical applications. Surface functionality is the next step in developing these complexes as competent, target-specific gene carriers. Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) is the natural choice to serve as a protective coat or act as a tether for a specific ligand on the surface of these complexes due to its biocompatibility and ability to convey stealth-like properties. Understanding the effect of PEG on the internal structure and surface properties of CL-DNA complexes is essential in developing vectors with more complex derivatives of PEG, such as Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-based peptide-PEG-lipids. We report on x-ray diffraction studies to probe the internal structure of CL-DNA complexes consisting of a ternary mixture of cationic lipids, neutral lipids, and PEG-lipids. The PEG-coated complexes are found to exhibit a structure consistent with the lamellar phase. In addition, three distinct DNA interchain interaction regimes were found to exist, due to a), repulsive long-range electrostatic forces; b), short-range repulsive hydration forces; and c), novel polymer-induced depletion attraction forces in two dimensions. Optical microscopy and reporter gene assays further demonstrate the incorporation of the PEG-lipids into the lamellar CL-DNA complexes under biologically relevant conditions, revealing surface modification. Both techniques show that PEG-lipids with a polymer chain of molecular weight 400 do not provide adequate shielding of the PEGylated CL-DNA complexes, whereas PEG-lipids with a polymer chain of molecular weight 2000 confer stealth-like properties. This surface functionalization is a crucial initial step in the development of competent vectors for in vivo systemic gene delivery and suggests that a second type of surface functionality can be added specifically for targeting by the incorporation of peptide-PEG-lipids.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]