Intracellular delivery of functional proteins with DNA-protein nanogels-lipids complex

24 January 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Using functional proteins for therapeutic purposes due to their high selectivity and/or catalytic properties can enable the control of various cellular processes, however, the transport of active proteins inside living cells remains a major challenge. In contrast, intracellular delivery of nucleic acids has become a routine method for a number of applications in gene therapy, genome-editing or immunization. Here we report a functionalizable platform constituting of DNA-protein nanogel carriers crosslinked through streptavidin-biotin or streptactin-biotin interactions and demonstrate its applicability for intracellular delivery of active proteins. We show that the nanogels can be loaded with active proteins bearing either biotin, streptavidin or strep-tag, and the resulting functionalized nanogels can be delivered into living cells after complexation with cationic lipid vectors. We use this approach for delivery of alkaline phosphatase enzyme which is shown to keep its catalytic activity after internalization by mouse melanoma B16 cells, as demonstrated by DDAO-phosphate assay. The resulting functionalized nanogels have dimensions of the order of 100 nm, contain around 100 enzyme molecules and are shown to be transfectable at low lipid concentrations (charge ratio R+/- = 0.75). This ensures low toxicity of our system, which in combination with high local enzyme concentration (~ 100 µM) underlines potential interest of this nanoplatform for biomedical applications.

Keywords

DNA nanogels
transfection
functionalization
enzymes
delivery
proteins

Supplementary materials

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