We investigated the design and gelation behavior of some two-component supramolecular gels formed from two sulfonic acids, ., naphthalene-2-sulfonic acid and (1)-(-)-10-camphorsulfonic acid paired with various organic amines. This study utilized experimental characterizations, functional studies and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study the gelation process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn an effort to probe the importance of endosomal protonation in pH-sensitive, cationic, lipid-mediated, non-viral gene delivery, we have designed and synthesized a novel cholesterol-based, endosomal pH-sensitive, histidylated, cationic amphiphile (lipid 1), its less pH-sensitive counterpart with an electron-deficient, tosylated histidine head group (lipid 2) as well as a third new cholesterol-based, cationic lipid containing no histidine head group (lipid 3). For all the novel liposomes and lipoplexes, we evaluated hysicochemical characteristics, including lipid:DNA interactions, global surface charge, and sizes. As anticipated, lipid 2 showed lower efficacies than lipid 1 for the transfection of 293T7 cells with the cytoplasmic gene expression vector pT7Luc at lipid:DNA mole ratios of 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein, we report enhanced intravenous mouse lung transfection using novel cyclic-head-group analogs of usually open-head cationic transfection lipids. Design and synthesis of the new cyclic-head lipid N,N-di-n-tetradecyl-3,4-dihydroxy-pyrrolidinium chloride (lipid 1) and its higher alkyl-chain analogs (lipids 2-4) and relative in vitro and in vivo gene transfer efficacies of cyclic-head lipids 1-4 to their corresponding open-head analogs [lipid 5, namely N,N-di-n-tetradecyl-N,N-(2-hydroxyethyl)ammonium chloride and its higher alkyl-chain analogs, lipids 6-8] have been described. In stark contrast to comparable in vitro transfection efficacies of both the cyclic- and open-head lipids, lipids 1-4 with cyclic heads were found to be significantly more efficient (by 5- to 11-fold) in transfecting mouse lung than their corresponding open-head analogs (5-8) upon intravenous administration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn combination with equimolar 1,2-dioleoyl-L-alpha-glycero-3-phosphatidyl ethanolamine, a novel cholesterol-based cationic lipid with beta-alanine head-group (2) has been demonstrated to be strikingly more efficacious (10-24-fold) in transfecting CHO, COS-1 and HepG2 cells than its glycine analog (1) containing just one less methylene unit in its head-group region. Syntheses, characterizations and in vitro transfection biology of lipids 1 and 2 are described. Present findings demonstrate that even truly minor structural alterations, such as inclusion of just one additional methylene functionality in the polar head-group region, can convert an essentially transfection-incompetent cholesterol-based cationic amphiphile to a remarkably efficient cationic transfection lipid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical success of gene therapy is critically dependent on the development of efficient and safe gene delivery reagents, popularly known as "Transfection Vectors". The transfection vectors commonly used in gene therapy are mainly of two types: viral and non-viral. The efficiencies of viral transfection vectors are, in general, superior to their non-viral counterparts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough detailed structure-activity, physicochemical and biophysical investigations in probing the anchor influence in liposomal gene delivery have been reported for glycerol-based transfection lipids, the corresponding investigation for non-glycerol based simple monocationic transfection lipids have not yet been undertaken. Towards this end, herein, we delineate our structure-activity and physicochemical approach in deciphering the anchor dependency in liposomal gene delivery using fifteen new structural analogues (lipids 1-15) of recently reported non-glycerol based monocationic transfection lipids. The C(14) analogues in both series 1 (lipids 1-6) and series 2 (lipids 7-15) showed maximum efficiency in transfecting COS-1 and CHO cells.
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