Efficient gene silencing by self-assembled complexes of siRNA and symmetrical fatty acid amides of spermine

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Abstract

Gene silencing by siRNA (synthetic dsRNA of 21-25 nucleotides) is a well established biological tool in gene expression studies and has a promising therapeutic potential for difficult-to-treat diseases. Five fatty acids of various chain length and oxidation state (C12:0, C18:0, C18:1, C18:2, C22:1) were conjugated to the naturally occurring polyamine, spermine, and evaluated for siRNA delivery and gene knock-down. siRNA delivery could not be related directly to gene silencing efficiency as N4,N9-dierucoyl spermine resulted in higher siRNA delivery compared to N4,N9-dioleoyl spermine. GFP silencing in HeLa cells showed that the unsaturated fatty acid amides are more efficient than saturated fatty acid amides, with N4,N9-dioleoyl spermine resulting in the most efficient gene silencing in the presence of serum. The alamarBlue cell viability assay showed that fatty acid amides of spermine have good viability (75%-85% compared to control) except N4,N9-dilauroyl spermine which resulted in low cell viability. These results prove that unsaturated fatty acid amides of spermine are efficient, non-toxic, non-viral vectors for siRNA mediated gene silencing. © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Metwally, A. A., Pourzand, C., & Blagbrough, I. S. (2011). Efficient gene silencing by self-assembled complexes of siRNA and symmetrical fatty acid amides of spermine. Pharmaceutics, 3(2), 125–140. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics3020125

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