Blurring the Role of Oligonucleotides: Spherical Nucleic Acids as a Drug Delivery Vehicle

Xuyu Tan(Northeastern University), Xueguang Lu(Northeastern University), Fei Jia(Northeastern University), Xiaofan Liu(Northeastern University), Yehui Sun(Northeastern University), Jessica K. Logan(Northeastern University), Ke Zhang(Northeastern University)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
August 15, 2016
Cited by 179

Abstract

Nucleic acids are generally regarded as the payload in gene therapy, often requiring a carrier for intracellular delivery. With the recent discovery that spherical nucleic acids enter cells rapidly, we demonstrate that nucleic acids also have the potential to act as a delivery vehicle. Herein, we report an amphiphilic DNA-paclitaxel conjugate, which forms stable micellar nanoparticles in solution. The nucleic acid component acts as both a therapeutic payload for intracellular gene regulation and the delivery vehicle for the drug component. A bioreductively activated, self-immolative disulfide linker is used to tether the drug, allowing free drug to be released upon cell uptake. We found that the DNA-paclitaxel nanostructures enter cells ∼100 times faster than free DNA, exhibit increased stability against nuclease, and show nearly identical cytotoxicity as free drug. These nanostructures allow one to access a gene target and a drug target using only the payloads themselves, bypassing the need for a cocarrier system.


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