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A Proton-Activatable DNA-Based Nanosystem Enables Co-Delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 and DNAzyme for Combined Gene Therapy.

Feng LiNachuan SongYuhang DongShuai LiLinghui LiYujie LiuZhemian LiDayong Yang
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
CRISPR/Cas9 is emerging as a platform for gene therapeutics, and the treatment efficiency is expected to be enhanced by combination with other therapeutic agents. Herein, we report a proton-activatable DNA-based nanosystem that enables co-delivery of Cas9/sgRNA and DNAzyme for the combined gene therapy of cancer. Ultra-long ssDNA chains, which contained the recognition sequences of sgRNA in Cas9/sgRNA, DNAzyme sequence and HhaI enzyme cleavage site, were synthesized as the scaffold of the nanosystem. The DNAzyme cofactor Mn 2+ was used to compress DNA chains to form nanoparticles and acid-degradable polymer-coated HhaI enzymes were assembled on the surface of nanoparticles. In response to protons in lysosome, the polymer coating was decomposed and HhaI enzyme was consequently exposed to recognize and cut off the cleavage sites, thus triggering the release of Cas9/sgRNA and DNAzyme to regulate gene expressions to achieve a high therapeutic efficacy of breast cancer.
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