Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery

Even though siRNA shows great promise in the treatment of genetic disease, cancer and viral infection; the lack of a suitable delivery vector remains a barrier to clinical use. Currently, viral vectors lead the field in terms of efficacy but are generally regarded as prohibitively dangerous. Synthet...

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Main Author: Serginson, James Michael
Other Authors: Thanou, Maya ; Steinke, Joachim
Published: Imperial College London 2012
Subjects:
540
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.616721
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6167212017-08-30T03:17:23ZBio-reducible polyamines for siRNA deliverySerginson, James MichaelThanou, Maya ; Steinke, Joachim2012Even though siRNA shows great promise in the treatment of genetic disease, cancer and viral infection; the lack of a suitable delivery vector remains a barrier to clinical use. Currently, viral vectors lead the field in terms of efficacy but are generally regarded as prohibitively dangerous. Synthetic alternatives such as cationic polymers could overcome this problem. Previous work in the group found that small, cationic, disulfide-containing, cyclic polyamines – despite being non-polymeric – were useful as vectors for pDNA transfection; this work focuses on adapting the material for siRNA. A branched analogue of the cyclic compounds was prepared and the synthetic procedures investigated are discussed. The suitability of both compounds for siRNA delivery was studied in depth. Characterisation of their interactions with nucleic acids under various conditions was carried out using light-scattering techniques, gel electrophoresis and fluorescent dye exclusion assays. Results from these experiments were used to allow successful use of the materials as vectors and enable understanding of the mechanism of the template-driven polymerisation. Early data concerning the efficacy of the materials as an siRNA delivery system in vitro was obtained using A549 lung carcinoma cells as a model system with siRNAs targeting the production of the enzyme GAPDH. Both compounds showed a hint of successful siRNA Delivery but the data was not overwhelmingly conclusive. Further experiments will be required to optimise the materials for maximum biological efficacy and to confirm they offer potential as a novel delivery system.540Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.616721http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/14688Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 540
spellingShingle 540
Serginson, James Michael
Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
description Even though siRNA shows great promise in the treatment of genetic disease, cancer and viral infection; the lack of a suitable delivery vector remains a barrier to clinical use. Currently, viral vectors lead the field in terms of efficacy but are generally regarded as prohibitively dangerous. Synthetic alternatives such as cationic polymers could overcome this problem. Previous work in the group found that small, cationic, disulfide-containing, cyclic polyamines – despite being non-polymeric – were useful as vectors for pDNA transfection; this work focuses on adapting the material for siRNA. A branched analogue of the cyclic compounds was prepared and the synthetic procedures investigated are discussed. The suitability of both compounds for siRNA delivery was studied in depth. Characterisation of their interactions with nucleic acids under various conditions was carried out using light-scattering techniques, gel electrophoresis and fluorescent dye exclusion assays. Results from these experiments were used to allow successful use of the materials as vectors and enable understanding of the mechanism of the template-driven polymerisation. Early data concerning the efficacy of the materials as an siRNA delivery system in vitro was obtained using A549 lung carcinoma cells as a model system with siRNAs targeting the production of the enzyme GAPDH. Both compounds showed a hint of successful siRNA Delivery but the data was not overwhelmingly conclusive. Further experiments will be required to optimise the materials for maximum biological efficacy and to confirm they offer potential as a novel delivery system.
author2 Thanou, Maya ; Steinke, Joachim
author_facet Thanou, Maya ; Steinke, Joachim
Serginson, James Michael
author Serginson, James Michael
author_sort Serginson, James Michael
title Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
title_short Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
title_full Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
title_fullStr Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
title_full_unstemmed Bio-reducible polyamines for siRNA delivery
title_sort bio-reducible polyamines for sirna delivery
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.616721
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