Abstract
Using natural-based lipids to construct biocompatible, controllable and efficient nanocarriers and elucidating their structure-function relationships, was regarded as an important area for creating sustainable biomaterials. Herein, we utilized two natural steroids: cholesterol and diosgenin (bearing different hydrophobic tails) as the building blocks, to synthesize a series of natural steroid-based cationic random copolymers PMA6Chol-r-PDMAEMA and PMA6Dios-r-PDMAEMAviaRAFT polymerization. The results demonstrated that the steroid-r-PDMAEMA copolymers could efficiently bind pDNA (N/P < 3.0) and then form near-spherical shape (142-449 nm) and positively-charged (+11.5 to +19.6 mV) nanoparticles. Thein vitrocytotoxicity and gene transfection efficiency greatly depend on the steroid hydrophobic tail structures and steroid/PDMAEMA block ratios. Optimum transfection efficiency of the (Chol-P1/pDNA andDios-P3/pDNA) nanoplexes could reach to 18.1-31.2% of the PEI-25K/pDNA complex. Moreover, all of the steroid-r-PDMAEMA/Cy3-pDNA nanoplexes have an obvious “lysosome localization” effect, indicating the steroid structures do not remarkably influence the intracellular localization behaviors of these nanoplexes.
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CITATION STYLE
Wang, Z., Sun, J., Li, M., Luo, T., Shen, Y., Cao, A., & Sheng, R. (2021). Natural steroid-based cationic copolymers cholesterol/diosgenin-r-PDMAEMAs and their pDNA nanoplexes: impact of steroid structures and hydrophobic/hydrophilic ratios on pDNA delivery. RSC Advances, 11(32), 19450–19460. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra00223f
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