Abstract

BackgroundAlthough multicompartment systems made of single unilamellar vesicles offer the potential to outperform single compartment systems widely used in analytic, synthetic, and medical applications, their use has remained marginal to date. On the one hand, this can be attributed to the binary character of the majority of the current tethering protocols that impedes the implementation of real multicomponent or multifunctional systems. On the other hand, the few tethering protocols theoretically providing multicompartment systems composed of several distinct vesicle populations suffer from the readjustment of the vesicle formation procedure as well as from the loss of specificity of the linking mechanism over time.Methodology/Principal FindingsIn previous studies, we presented implementations of multicompartment systems and resolved the readjustment of the vesicle formation procedure as well as the loss of specificity by using linkers consisting of biotinylated DNA single strands that were anchored to phospholipid-grafted biotinylated PEG tethers via streptavidin as a connector. The systematic analysis presented herein provides evidences for the incorporation of phospholipid-grafted biotinylated PEG tethers to the vesicle membrane during vesicle formation, providing specific anchoring sites for the streptavidin loading of the vesicle membrane. Furthermore, DNA-mediated vesicle-vesicle self-assembly was found to be sequence-dependent and to depend on the presence of monovalent salts.Conclusions/SignificanceThis study provides a solid basis for the implementation of multi-vesicle assemblies that may affect at least three distinct domains. (i) Analysis. Starting with a minimal system, the complexity of a bottom-up system is increased gradually facilitating the understanding of the components and their interaction. (ii) Synthesis. Consecutive reactions may be implemented in networks of vesicles that outperform current single compartment bioreactors in versatility and productivity. (iii) Personalized medicine. Transport and targeting of long-lived, pharmacologically inert prodrugs and their conversion to short-lived, active drug molecules directly at the site of action may be accomplished if multi-vesicle assemblies of predefined architecture are used.

Highlights

  • Artificial vesicles feature an aqueous compartment separated from an aqueous surrounding by a closed membrane that is almost impermeable for hydrophilic substances

  • In previous work [20,21,48], we presented implementations of multicompartment systems and resolved the problem of readjusting vesicle formation/composition as well as of losing specificity by using linkers consisting of biotinylated DNA single strands that were anchored by long and flexible phospholipidgrafted biotinylated PEG tethers via streptavidin as a connector

  • Since (i) the DNA strands are anchored by two phospholipid-grafted biotinylated PEG tethers per streptavidin molecule, (ii) the streptavidin crystallizes on the surface of vesicles [49,51], and (iii) the phospholipid-grafted biotinylated PEG tethers provide high detachment resistance [52] and no detectable intermembrane transfer of linkers from donor liposomes to acceptor liposomes [53] it is reasonable to conclude that loss of specificity described for current DNA-mediated linking mechanisms remains absent for the tethering method presented in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Artificial vesicles feature an aqueous compartment separated from an aqueous surrounding by a closed membrane that is almost impermeable for hydrophilic substances. Since single stranded DNA (ssDNA) offers a multitude of distinct linkers, high specificity of binding between complementary sequences, and a digital nature of DNA base coding, it represents an ideal candidate for the implementation of multi-vesicle assemblies of programmable composition and spatial arrangement.

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