From pulmonary surfactant – synthetic KL4 peptide as effective siRNA delivery vector for pulmonary delivery
2017
Pulmonary delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA) has huge potential for the treatment of a wide range of respiratory diseases. The ability of naked siRNA to transfect cells in the lungs without a delivery vector has prompted the investigation of whether an endogenous component is at least partially responsible for the cellular uptake of siRNA, and whether a safe and efficient delivery system could be developed from this component to further improve the transfection efficiency. Surfactant protein B (SP-B), a positively charged protein molecule found in lung surfactant, is one of the possible candidates. While the role of SP-B in siRNA transfection remains to be determined, the SP-B mimic, synthetic KL4 peptide, was investigated in this study as a potential siRNA carrier. KL4 is a 21-residue cationic peptide that was able to bind to siRNA to form nanosized complexes. It mediated siRNA transfection effectively in vitro on human lung epithelial cells, A549 cells, and BEAS-2B cells, which was comparable to ...
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