Hydrophobic Moiety of Cationic Lipids Strongly Modulates Their Transfection Activity

Synthetic cationic lipids are widely used components of nonviral gene carriers, and the factors regulating their transfection efficiency are the subject of considerable interest. In view of the important role that electrostatic interactions with the polyanionic nucleic acids play in formation of lip...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMolecular pharmaceutics Vol. 6; no. 3; pp. 951 - 958
Main Authors Koynova, Rumiana, Tenchov, Boris, Wang, Li, MacDonald, Robert C
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 01.06.2009
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Synthetic cationic lipids are widely used components of nonviral gene carriers, and the factors regulating their transfection efficiency are the subject of considerable interest. In view of the important role that electrostatic interactions with the polyanionic nucleic acids play in formation of lipoplexes, a common empirical approach to improving transfection has been the synthesis and testing of amphiphiles with new versions of positively charged polar groups, while much less attention has been given to the role of the hydrophobic lipid moieties. On the basis of data for ∼20 cationic phosphatidylcholine (PC) derivatives, here we demonstrate that hydrocarbon chain variations of these lipids modulate by over 2 orders of magnitude their transfection efficiency. The observed molecular structure−activity relationship manifests in well-expressed dependences of activity on two important molecular characteristics, chain unsaturation and total number of carbon atoms in the lipid chains, which is representative of the lipid hydrophobic volume and hydrophilic−lipophilic ratio. Transfection increases with decrease of chain length and increase of chain unsaturation. Maximum transfection was found for cationic PCs with monounsaturated 14:1 chains. It is of particular importance that the high-transfection lipids strongly promote cubic phase formation in zwitterionic membrane phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). These remarkable correlations point to an alternative, chain-dependent process in transfection, not related to the electrostatic cationic−anionic lipid interactions.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
USDOE
Present address: Ohio State University College of Pharmacy, 542 Parks Hall, 500 W 12th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210, USA
ISSN:1543-8384
1543-8392
DOI:10.1021/mp8002573