Design and evaluation of ionizable peptide amphiphiles for siRNA delivery

Publication date: Available online 22 May 2019Source: International Journal of PharmaceuticsAuthor(s): Patrick Neuberg, Alain Wagner, Jean-Serge Remy, Antoine KichlerAbstractSmall interfering RNAs (siRNAs) can down-regulate the expression of a target mRNA molecule in a sequence-specific manner, making them an attractive new class of drugs with broad potential for the treatment of diverse human diseases. Here, we report the synthesis of a series of cationic amphiphiles which were obtained by the coupling of amino acids and dipeptides onto a lipidic double chain. The new amphiphiles presenting a peptidic motif on a short hydrophilic spacer group were evaluated for selective gene silencing through RNA interference. Our results show that tryptophan residues boost siRNA delivery in an unexpected manner. The silencing experiments performed with very low concentrations of siRNA showed that the best formulations could induce significant death of tumor cells after silencing of polo-like kinase 1 which is implicated in cell cycle progression. In addition, these Trp containing peptide amphiphiles were highly efficient siRNA delivery vectors even in presence of competing serum proteins.Graphical abstract
Source: International Journal of Pharmaceutics - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research