2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(419e) Efficient Nuclear Delivery of Antisense Oligo-Nucleotides by Neutral, Self-Porating Polymersomes
Authors
Younghoon Kim - Presenter, University of Pennsylvania
Manu Tewari, University of Pennsylvania
David Pajeroski, University of Pennsylvania
Shamik Sen, University of Pennsylvania
Williams Jason, Drexel University
Shashank Sirsi, Drexel University
Gordon Lutz, Drexel University
Dennis E. Discher, University of Pennsylvania
Delivery of antisense oligonucleotides, AON, presents many of the same challenges as delivery of any nucleic acid: charge, stability, cell uptake, endolysosomal escape, and entry into the nucleus. Here we demonstrate efficient delivery of AON after loading into bio-degradable polymer vesicles or polymersomes'. We focus on AON delivery to muscle cells in vitro and in vivo because of the emergence of AON in therapeutic strategies directed at muscular dystrophies. To first clarify uptake kinetics without the complications of typical multi-layered myotube cultures, we use micro-patterned C2C12 cells and show efficient uptake of AON-polymersomes. The bio-degradable polymersomes break down and foster AON escape with the binding of fluorescent-AON into the nuclear spliceosomes. Intramuscular injections of the Polymersome-AON into the hind-limbs of mdx-dystrophic mice show more efficient nuclear uptake than AON alone and also lead to dystrophin expression in the mdx mice. In sum, these neutral, degradable carriers of AON show promise in vivo.