AI Article Synopsis

  • Liver cancer treatment efforts are focusing on arterial injections of chemoembolizing agents, with novel therapies like gene therapy showing promise.
  • Poly(beta-amino ester)s (PBAEs) were developed to create nanoparticles for efficiently delivering DNA to liver cells, achieving high transfection rates (up to 98%) with minimal toxicity.
  • Specific formulations of PBAE-DNA demonstrated significant preference for targeting cancer cells over healthy cells, making them a potentially effective and safer treatment option for liver cancer.

Article Abstract

Liver cancer is a leading cause of cancer death. Most patients are treated by arterial injection of chemoembolizing agents, providing a convenient avenue for local treatment by novel therapies, including gene therapy. Poly(beta-amino ester)s (PBAEs) were synthesized and used to form nanoparticles for non-viral transfection of buffalo rat hepatoma (MCA-RH7777) and hepatocyte (BRL-3A) lines with eGFP and luciferase DNA. Hepatoma cells were transfected with up to (98 ± 0.4)% efficacy with no measurable cytotoxicity. Hepatocytes were transfected with as high as (73 ± 0.4)% efficacy with (10 ± 4)% non-specific cytotoxicity. In contrast, positive controls (branched polyethylenimine, Lipofectamine™ 2000, and X-tremeGENE(®) DNA HP) caused 30-90% toxicity in BRL-3A cells at doses required for >50% transfection. Of the 21 optimized PBAE-DNA formulations tested, 12 showed significant specificity for hepatoma cells over hepatocytes in monoculture (p < 0.05 for both percentage transfected and eGFP expression intensity). Top polymers from eGFP studies also delivered luciferase DNA with 220 ± 30-fold and 470 ± 30-fold greater specificity for hepatoma cells than hepatocytes. Transfections of co-cultures of hepatoma and hepatocytes with eGFP DNA also showed high specificity (1.9 ± 0.1- to 5.8± 1.4-fold more transfected hepatoma cells than hepatocytes, measured by percentage transfected and flow cytometry). By eGFP intensity, up to 530 ±60-fold higher average expression per cell was measured in hepatoma cells. One top formulation caused (95 ± 0.2)% transfection in hepatoma cells and (27 ± 0.2)% in hepatocytes [(96 ± 9)% relative hepatocyte viability]. PBAE-based nanoparticles are a viable strategy for liver cancer treatment, delivering genes to nearly 100% of cancer cells while maintaining high biomaterial-mediated specificity to prevent toxic side-effects on healthy hepatocytes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3915782PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbm.a.34616DOI Listing

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