Synthetic Monopartite Peptide That Enables the Nuclear Import of Genes Delivered by the Neurotensin-Polyplex Vector.
Francisco E Lopez-SalasRasajna NadellaMinerva Maldonado-BernyMaria L Escobedo-SanchezRosana Fiorentino-PérezBismark Gatica-GarcíaManuel A Fernandez-ParrillaMoreno Mario GilDavid Reyes-CoronaUbaldo GarcíaCarlos E Orozco-BarriosMaria E Gutierrez-CastilloDaniel Martínez-FongPublished in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2020)
Neurotensin (NTS)-polyplex is a multicomponent nonviral vector that enables gene delivery via internalization of the neurotensin type 1 receptor (NTSR1) to dopaminergic neurons and cancer cells. An approach to improving its therapeutic safety is replacing the viral karyophilic component (peptide KPSV40; MAPTKRKGSCPGAAPNKPK), which performs the nuclear import activity, by a shorter synthetic peptide (KPRa; KMAPKKRK). We explored this issue and the mechanism of plasmid DNA translocation through the expression of the green fluorescent protein or red fluorescent protein fused with KPRa and internalization assays and whole-cell patch-clamp configuration experiments in a single cell together with importin α/β pathway blockers. We showed that KPRa electrostatically bound to plasmid DNA increased the transgene expression compared with KPSV40 and enabled nuclear translocation of KPRa-fused red fluorescent proteins and plasmid DNA. Such translocation was blocked with ivermectin or mifepristone, suggesting importin α/β pathway mediation. KPRa also enabled NTS-polyplex-mediated expression of reporter or physiological genes such as human mesencephalic-derived neurotrophic factor (hMANF) in dopaminergic neurons in vivo. KPRa is a synthetic monopartite peptide that showed nuclear import activity in NTS-polyplex vector-mediated gene delivery. KPRa could also improve the transfection of other nonviral vectors used in gene therapy.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- gene therapy
- single cell
- binding protein
- escherichia coli
- circulating tumor
- crispr cas
- quantum dots
- single molecule
- cell free
- living cells
- endothelial cells
- spinal cord
- genome wide
- high throughput
- sars cov
- stem cells
- dna methylation
- angiotensin ii
- spinal cord injury
- transcription factor
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- fluorescent probe
- genome wide analysis