Abstract
A polypseudorotaxane consisting of a linear polyethylenimine with Mn of 22,000 (LPEI22k) and gamma-cyclodextrins (gamma-CDs; LPEI22k/gamma-CD) has been examined as a gene carrier. The polyplex formation with luciferase-encoding plasmid DNA (pDNA), intracellular trafficking of polyplex, cytotoxicity, and transfection efficiency were evaluated by various characteristic methods. LPEI22k/gamma-CD formed a pDNA polyplex at higher N/P ratios than LPEI22k; this suggests that the gamma-CD threading sterically interfered with the polyplex formation. In addition, the zeta potentials of the polyplex significantly decreased due to the reduction in charge density of LPEI22k caused by gamma-CD threading. The cellular uptake of pDNA in the LPEI22k/gamma-CD polyplex was enhanced by free gamma-CDs released from the polyplex that might accelerate the cellular uptake through enhanced membrane affinity. LPEI22k/gamma-CD significantly increased cell viability even at high N/P ratios, and the polyplex showed high transfection efficacy. The low cytotoxicity and high gene expression of LPEI22k/gamma-CD are advantageous to polyplex administration in vivo.
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