A novel method for dna delivery into bacteria using cationic copolymers

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Abstract

Amphiphilic copolymers have a wide variety of medical and biotechnological applications, including DNA transfection in eukaryotic cells. Still, no polymer-primed transfection of prokaryotic cells has been described. The reversible additionfragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymer synthesis technique and the reversible deactivation radical polymerization variants allow the design of polymers with well-controlled molar mass, morphology, and hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity ratios. RAFT was used to synthesize two amphiphilic copolymers containing different ratios of the amphiphilic poly[2-(dimethyl-amino) ethyl methacrylate] and the hydrophobic poly [methyl methacrylate]. These copolymers bound to pUC-19 DNA and successfully transfected non-competent Escherichia coli DH5α, with transformation efficiency in the range of 103 colony-forming units per mg of plasmid DNA. These results demonstrate prokaryote transformation using polymers with controlled amphiphilic/hydrophobic ratios.

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de Souza, V. V., Vitale, P. A. M., Florenzano, F. H., Salinas, R. K., & Cuccovia, I. M. (2021). A novel method for dna delivery into bacteria using cationic copolymers. Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, 54(5). https://doi.org/10.1590/1414-431x202010743

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