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One-pot synthesis of pH-responsive hybrid nanogel particles for the intracellular delivery of small interfering RNA

Authors :
Francesco Salvatore
Bruna Corradetti
Seth G. Haddix
Alessandro Parodi
Ennio Tasciotti
Sm Z. Khaled
Shilpa Scaria
Armando Cevenini
Michael Evangelopoulos
Iman K. Yazdi
Claudia Corbo
Ye Hu
Khaled, Sm Z
Cevenini, Armando
Yazdi, Iman K.
Parodi, Alessandro
Evangelopoulos, Michael
Corbo, Claudia
Scaria, Shilpa
Hu, Ye
Haddix, Seth G.
Corradetti, Bruna
Salvatore, Francesco
Tasciotti, Ennio
Khaled, S
Cevenini, A
Yazdi, I
Parodi, A
Evangelopoulos, M
Corbo, C
Scaria, S
Hu, Y
Haddix, S
Corradetti, B
Salvatore, F
Tasciotti, E
Source :
Biomaterials. 87:57-68
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

This report describes a novel, one-pot synthesis of hybrid nanoparticles formed by a nanostructured inorganic silica core and an organic pH-responsive hydrogel shell. This easy-to-perform, oil-in-water emulsion process synthesizes fluorescently-doped silica nanoparticles wrapped within a tunable coating of cationic poly(2-diethylaminoethyl methacrylate) hydrogel in one step. Transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering analysis demonstrated that the hydrogel-coated nanoparticles are uniformly dispersed in the aqueous phase. The formation of covalent chemical bonds between the silica and the polymer increases the stability of the organic phase around the inorganic core as demonstrated by thermogravimetric analysis. The cationic nature of the hydrogel is responsible for the pH buffering properties of the nanostructured system and was evaluated by titration experiments. Zeta-potential analysis demonstrated that the charge of the system was reversed when transitioned from acidic to basic pH and vice versa. Consequently, small interfering RNA (siRNA) can be loaded and released in an acidic pH environment thereby enabling the hybrid particles and their payload to avoid endosomal sequestration and enzymatic degradation. These nanoparticles, loaded with specific siRNA molecules directed towards the transcript of the membrane receptor CXCR4, significantly decreased the expression of this protein in a human breast cancer cell line (i.e., MDA-MB-231). Moreover, intravenous administration of siRNA-loaded nanoparticles demonstrated a preferential accumulation at the tumor site that resulted in a reduction of CXCR4 expression.

Details

ISSN :
01429612
Volume :
87
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomaterials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4478553244bd8ede48d41407b71fbc97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.01.052