Abstract

Cancer is an extremely complex disease, typically caused by mutations in cancer-critical genes. By delivering therapeutic nucleic acids (NAs) to patients, gene therapy offers the possibility to supplement, repair or silence such faulty genes or to stimulate their immune system to fight the disease. While the challenges of gene therapy for cancer are significant, the latter approach (a type of immunotherapy) starts showing promising results in early-stage clinical trials. One important advantage of NA-based cancer therapies over synthetic drugs and protein treatments is the prospect of a more universal approach to designing therapies. Designing NAs with different sequences, for different targets, can be achieved by using the same technologies. This versatility and scalability of NA drug design and production on demand open the way for more efficient, affordable and personalized cancer treatments in the future. However, the delivery of exogenous therapeutic NAs into the patients’ targeted cells is also challenging. Membrane-type lipids exhibiting permanent or transient cationic character have been shown to associate with NAs (anionic), forming nanosized lipid-NA complexes. These complexes form a wide variety of nanostructures, depending on the global formulation composition and properties of the lipids and NAs. Importantly, these different lipid-NA nanostructures interact with cells via different mechanisms and their therapeutic potential can be optimized to promising levels in vitro. The complexes are also highly customizable in terms of surface charge and functionalization to allow a wide range of targeting and smart-release properties. Most importantly, these synthetic particles offer possibilities for scaling-up and affordability for the population at large. Hence, the versatility and scalability of these particles seem ideal to accommodate the versatility that NA therapies offer. While in vivo efficiency of lipid-NA complexes is still poor in most cases, the advances achieved in the last three decades are significant and very recently a lipid-based gene therapy medicine was approved for the first time (for treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis). Although the path to achieve efficient NA-delivery in cancer therapy is still long and tenuous, these advances set a new hope for more treatments in the future. In this review, we attempt to cover the most important biophysical and physicochemical aspects of non-viral lipid-based gene therapy formulations, with a perspective on future cancer treatments in mind.

Highlights

  • Cancer usually results from mutations in cancer-critical genes

  • Therapeutic DNA is typically used in the form of plasmids encoding whole genes and regulatory sequences for endogenous proteins, such as the suppressor gene p53 [36]

  • These findings show that small differences in the preparation protocol result in significant differences in the morphology of PEGylated cationic lipid-DNA complexes

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer usually results from mutations in cancer-critical genes. The wide diversity of genes, cell-types and tissues, their underlying interactions, and secondary mutations caused by the abnormal high-rate cell multiplication, make cancer a very complex disease to understand and treat [1]. This seemingly daunting task is performed extremely well by viruses This high efficiency achieved by viral capsids remains when the viral NAs are removed and replaced by therapeutic NAs. viral gene therapy approaches are the most commonly used in the current clinical trials and approved medicines [7,21]. Membrane-type lipids exhibiting permanent or transient cationic character are able to associate with NAs via electrostatic interactions, forming nanosized complexes that efficiently transfect eukaryotic cells [22,23] Such lipid-based systems are especially attractive due to their versatility, low immunogenicity, capacity for loading full-length genes and regulatory sequences (unlike the viral capsid limited capacity), and potential for simpler, more scalable and affordable production [3,24,25,26]. We attempt to cover the most important physicochemical aspects of non-viral lipid-based gene therapy formulations, with a perspective on future cancer treatments in mind

Nucleic Acid Biophysical Properties and Therapeutic Uses
Lipid Self-Assembly and Lipid Film Elastic Energy
Schematic
Lipid Film Elastic Energy
Whereas
Lipid-NA
Lipid-NA Structure
Lamellar Complexes—Lα
Inverted Hexagonal Complexes—HII C
Inverse Bicontinuous Cubic Complexes—QII C
Normal Bicontinuous Cubic Complexes—QI C
Normal Columnar Complexes—HI C and SI C
Other Normal Phases
Size and Structure Modulation In Pre-Formed Lipid Assemblies
Solvent-Exchange and Monomolecular Nucleic Acid Lipid Particles
Cell Uptake
Endosomal Escape and Transfection Efficiency
Exploring Intracellular Stimuli
Targeting the Tumor
Passive Targeting
Active Targeting
Exploiting Local Stimuli
Prospects
10. Conclusions
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