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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
August
'Cookbook recipes' would
cure disease with nontoxic DNA delivery systems
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
8/10/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| “By
understanding some of the physics, we now have recipes
for assembling delivery systems with different structures,
which can have intrinsically different, controllable
DNA delivery efficiencies,” said Gerard Wong,
a professor of materials science and engineering,
of physics, and of bioengineering. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
– Scientists studying the structure and interaction of negatively
charged lipids and DNA molecules have created a “cookbook”
for a class of nontoxic DNA delivery systems that will assist doctors
and clinicians in the safe and effective delivery of genetic medicine.
As reported in the Aug. 9 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, researchers have now performed a careful, comprehensive
study to see how negatively charged lipids stick to negatively charged
DNA and self-organize into structures.
“Many research groups have made concoctions with ingredients in
different proportions and then assessed their effectiveness in gene
delivery, but this is hard and requires a lot of intuition,” said
Gerard Wong, a professor of materials
science and engineering, of physics,
and of bioengineering at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and corresponding author
of the paper.
“By understanding some of the physics, we now have recipes for
assembling delivery systems with different structures, which can have
intrinsically different, controllable DNA delivery efficiencies,”
Wong said. “We found that the same family of structures are generated
for many different ions.”
Gene therapy is one of the most promising strategies for developing
cures for many hereditary and acquired diseases. Protocols have been
approved for treating cancer, cystic fibrosis and neuromuscular disorders,
for example, but delivering DNA to the proper location and getting the
right amount of DNA expression without killing innocent cells has become
the Achilles’ heel in DNA delivery.
Positively charged (cationic) synthetic molecules will readily bond
to negatively charged DNA molecules and have been used for DNA delivery,
but these cationic molecules are often toxic to cells, Wong said. An
alternative is to use naturally occurring negatively charged (anionic)
lipids that won’t harm cells.
“The problem then becomes: ‘How do you stick a negatively
charged lipid to a negatively charged DNA molecule?’ ” said
Wong, who also is a researcher at the Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. “One idea is
to glue the lipids and DNA together with positively charged ions like
calcium.”
Using synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering and confocal microscopy,
Wong and his colleagues – former Illinois graduate student Hongjun
Liang (now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California
at Santa Barbara) and theoretician Daniel Harries at the National Institutes
of Health – investigated how different ion-mediated interactions
were expressed in self-assembled anionic lipid-DNA structures.
At low membrane charge densities, for example, anionic lipids and DNA
molecules self-assemble into structures with alternating layers of DNA
and anionic membranes bound together by cations, Wong said. At high
membrane charge densities, there is a surprise: The DNA is expelled,
leaving a stack of anionic membranes glued together by cations –
a feature that could prove useful in other controlled drug delivery
applications.
The researchers also produced inverted hexagonal structures with encapsulated
DNA. “First, the strands of DNA are coated with positively charged
ions,” Wong said. “The strands are then wrapped with negatively
charged lipids and resemble tubes, which are then grouped into hexagonal
arrangements.”
Utilizing naturally occurring anionic lipids instead of cationic lipids
“creates a whole hierarchy of interactions and a much richer range
of structures,” Wong said, “which really opens up new possibilities.”
The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation funded
the work.
Editor’s note: To reach Gerard Wong, call 217-265-5254; e-mail:
gclwong@uiuc.edu.
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