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Injectable, Guest-Host Assembled Polyethylenimine Hydrogel for siRNA Delivery.

Leo L WangJanna N SloandAnn C GaffeyChantel M VenkataramanZhichun WangAlen TrubeljaDaniel A HammerPavan AtluriJason A Burdick
Published in: Biomacromolecules (2016)
While siRNA has tremendous potential for therapeutic applications, advancement is limited by poor delivery systems. Systemically, siRNAs are rapidly degraded, may have off-target silencing, and necessitate high working concentrations. To overcome this, we developed an injectable, guest-host assembled hydrogel between polyethylenimine (PEI) and polyethylene glycol (PEG) for local siRNA delivery. Guest-host modified polymers assembled with siRNAs to form polyplexes that had improved transfection and viability compared to PEI. At higher concentrations, these polymers assembled into shear-thinning hydrogels that rapidly self-healed. With siRNA encapsulation, the assemblies eroded as polyplexes which were active and transfected cells, observed by Cy3-siRNA uptake or GFP silencing in vitro. When injected into rat myocardium, the hydrogels localized polyplex release, observed by uptake of Cy5.5-siRNA and silencing of GFP for 1 week in a GFP-expressing rat. These results illustrate the potential for this system to be applied for therapeutic siRNA delivery, such as in cardiac pathologies.
Keyphrases
  • hyaluronic acid
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • tissue engineering
  • oxidative stress
  • induced apoptosis
  • heart failure
  • risk assessment
  • left ventricular
  • drug release
  • extracellular matrix
  • atrial fibrillation
  • cell death