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Nanoparticles of compacted DNA transfect postmitotic cells
Authors:Liu Ge  Li DeShan  Pasumarthy Murali K  Kowalczyk Tomasz H  Gedeon Christopher R  Hyatt Susannah L  Payne Jennifer M  Miller Timothy J  Brunovskis Peter  Fink Tamara L  Muhammad Osman  Moen Robert C  Hanson Richard W  Cooper Mark J
Institution:Department of Biochemistry, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
Abstract:Charge-neutral DNA nanoparticles have been developed in which single molecules of DNA are compacted to their minimal possible size. We speculated that the small size of these DNA nanoparticles may facilitate gene transfer in postmitotic cells, permitting nuclear uptake across the 25-nm nuclear membrane pore. To determine whether DNA nanoparticles can transfect nondividing cells, growth-arrested neuroblastoma and hepatoma cells were transfected with DNA/liposome mixtures encoding luciferase. In both models, growth-arrested cells were robustly transfected by compacted DNA (6,900-360-fold more than naked DNA). To evaluate mechanisms responsible for enhanced transfection, HuH-7 cells were microinjected with naked or compacted plasmids encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein. Cytoplasmic microinjection of DNA nanoparticles generated a approximately 10-fold improvement in transgene expression as compared with naked DNA; this enhancement was reversed by the nuclear pore inhibitor, wheat germ agglutinin. To determine the upper size limit for gene transfer, DNA nanoparticles of various sizes were microinjected into the cytoplasm. A marked decrease in transgene expression was observed as the minor ellipsoidal diameter approached 25 nm. In summary, suitably sized DNA nanoparticles productively transfect growth arrested cells by traversing the nuclear membrane pore.
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