Transferrin-polycation conjugates as carriers for DNA uptake into cells.

Ernst Wagner(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Martin Zenke(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Matthew Cotten(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Hartmut Beug(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Max L. Birnstiel(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 1, 1990
Cited by 656Open Access
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Abstract

We have developed a high-efficiency nucleic acid delivery system that uses receptor-mediated endocytosis to carry DNA macromolecules into cells. We accomplished this by conjugating the iron-transport protein transferrin to polycations that bind nucleic acids. Human transferrin, as well as the chicken homologue conalbumin, has been covalently linked to the small DNA-binding protein protamine or to polylysines of various sizes through a disulfide linkage. These modified transferrin molecules maintain their ability to bind their cognate receptor and to mediate efficient iron transport into the cell. The transferrin-polycation molecules form electrophoretically stable complexes with double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA, and modified RNA molecules independent of nucleic acid size (from short oligonucleotides to DNA of 21 kilobase pairs). When complexes of transferrin-polycation and a bacterial plasmid DNA containing the gene for Photinus pyralis luciferase are supplied to eukaryotic cells, high-level expression of the luciferase gene occurs, demonstrating transferrin receptor-mediated endocytosis and expression of the imported DNA. We refer to this delivery system as "transferrinfection."


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