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  4. Comparative Study on the In Vitro Cytotoxicity of Linear, Dendritic, and Hyperbranched Polylysine Analogues
 
research article

Comparative Study on the In Vitro Cytotoxicity of Linear, Dendritic, and Hyperbranched Polylysine Analogues

Kadlecova, Zuzana  
•
Baldi, Lucia  
•
Hacker, David  
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2012
Biomacromolecules

Lysine-based polycations are widely used as nonviral carriers for gene delivery. This manuscript reports the results of a comparative study on the in vitro cytotoxicity of a library of three structural polylysine variants, namely, linear polylysine (LPL), dendritic polylysine (DPL), and hyperbranched polylysine (HBPL). The aim of this study was to identify possible effects of polymer molecular weight and architecture on both immediate and delayed cytotoxicity and also to provide a mechanistic understanding for possible differences. Acute cytotoxicities were evaluated using cell viability assays with CHO DG44 cells. At comparable molecular weights, the EC50 values for the LPL analogues were similar to 5-250 times higher as compared to the DPL and HBPL samples. For low molecular weight polycations, osmotic shock was found to be an important contributor to immediate cell death, whereas for the higher molecular weight analogues, direct cell membrane disruption was identified to play a role. Delayed cytotoxicity (>= 3 h) was assessed by identifying several of the hallmark events that characterize apoptosis, including phosphatidyl serine translocation, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, cytoplasmic cytochrome C release, and caspase 3 activation. At comparable molecular weights, apoptosis was found to be more pronounced for DPL and HBPL as compared to LPL. This difference was ascribed to the fact that LPL is completely enzymatically degradable, in contrast to DPL and HBPL, which also contain e-peptidic bonds and are only partially degradable. Because their toxicity profiles are similar, HBPL is an interesting (i.e., synthetically easily accessible and inexpensive) alternative to DPL for the nonviral delivery of DNA.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/bm300930j
Web of Science ID

WOS:000309488600013

Author(s)
Kadlecova, Zuzana  
Baldi, Lucia  
Hacker, David  
Wurm, Florian Maria  
Klok, Harm-Anton  
Date Issued

2012

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Biomacromolecules
Volume

13

Issue

10

Start page

3127

End page

3137

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBTC  
LP  
Available on Infoscience
February 27, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/89425
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