2008 Annual Meeting

(71b) Polymersomes as Carriers for Genetic and Protein Therapeutics

Authors

David A. Christian - Presenter, University of Pennsylvania
Shenshen Cai, University of Pennsylvania
Diana M. Bowen, University of Pennsylvania
Younghoon Kim, University of Pennsylvania
J. David Pajerowski, University of Pennsylvania
Dennis E. Discher, University of Pennsylvania
Polymersomes are polymer-based vesicular shells that form upon hydration of PEG-based amphiphilic block copolymers. These high molecular weight amphiphiles impart physicochemical properties that allow polymersomes to stably encapsulate or integrate a broad range of active molecules as well as to circulate for several hours in vivo (t1/2 ~ 20 hours). This robustness together with recently described mechanisms for controlled breakdown of degradable polymersomes as well as escape from endolysosomes suggests that polymersomes might be usefully viewed as having structure/property/function relationships somewhere between lipid vesicles and viral capsids. Here we describe the assembly and development of polymersomes to encapsulate and deliver genetic (i.e. siRNA and AON) and protein therapeutics.