Despite
few successes to date, gene therapy is a highly promising
approach for medical therapy in the future. One of
the biggest difficulties with this process is finding
a suitable transport agent that can carry the nucleic
acid being used as a “drug” into the diseased target
cell. Killed viruses have been used as “taxis” for
these genes, but these often have unexpected health
consequences.
Recently, nanoparticles have been developed for gene therapy. A successful example
of this has been described by V. M. Rotello, N. S. Forbes, and their co-workers
in Massachusetts, USA. They used tiny spheres of gold with tightly packed, positively
charged hydrocarbon chains bound to their surface. These chains contain a photolabile
bond that is stable to visible light but breaks when irradiated with UV light
at a wavelength of 350 nm. This causes the positively charged fragment to fall
off, leaving the gold sphere with a negative charge on its surface.
DNA contains negatively charged phosphate groups that allow it to bind to the
positively charged gold spheres through electrostatic interactions. Cells that
were brought into contact with gold spheres loaded with DNA allowed these “DNA
taxis” to pass into their interior. The signal to “unload” was given by subsequent
irradiation with UV light: it destroyed the photolabile bond, reversing the surface
charge of the gold particles and releasing the DNA. Fortunately, the DNA was
not only brought into the cytoplasm; it made its way to where it was needed:
the cell nucleus. This is the location in the cell where DNA molecules are copied
for translation into proteins or are multiplied for cell division.
This process offers a relatively simple possibility for the transport and controlled
release of DNA into living cells. In addition, the authors believe that this
method should make it possible to steer interactions with other biomolecules,
such as proteins or pharmaceutical agents, making it possible to target specific
cells.
Author: Vincent M. Rotello, University of Massachusetts, Amherst (USA), www.chem.umass.edu/Faculty/rotello.htm
Title: Light-Regulated Release of DNA and its Delivery to Nuclei by Means of
Photolabile Gold Nanoparticles
Angewandte Chemie International Edition , 2006, 45 , No. 19,
3165–3169, doi: 10.1002/anie.200600214
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