A stopped-flow kinetic study of the assembly of nonviral gene delivery complexes

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Abstract

Stopped-flow circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy are used to characterize the assembly of complexes consisting of plasmid DNA bound to the cationic lipids dimethyldioctadecylammonium bromide and 1, 2-dioleoyl- 3-trimethylammonium-propane and a series of polyamidoamine dendrimers. The kinetics of complexation determined from the stopped-flow circular dichroism measurements suggests complexation occurs within 50 ms. Further analysis, however, was precluded by the presence of mixing (shear) artifacts. Stopped-flow fluorescence employing the high-affinity DNA dyes Hoechst 33258 and YOYO-1 was able to resolve two sequential steps in the assembly of complexes that are assigned to binding/ dehydration and condensation events. The rates of each process were determined over the temperature range of 10-50°C and activation energies were determined from the slope of Arrhenius plots. The behavior of polyamidoamine dendrimers can be separated into two classes based on their differing binding modes: generation 2 and the larger generations (G4, G7, and G9). The larger generations have activation energies for binding that follow the trend G4 > G7 > G9. The activation energies for condensation (compaction) of complexes composed of these same dendrimers have the opposite trend G9 > G7 > G4. It is postulated that a balance between a more energetically favorable condensation and less favorable binding may prove beneficial in enhancing gene delivery. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Braun, C. S., Fisher, M. T., Tomalia, D. A., Koe, G. S., Koe, J. G., & Middaugh, C. R. (2005). A stopped-flow kinetic study of the assembly of nonviral gene delivery complexes. Biophysical Journal, 88(6), 4146–4158. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.055202

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