5 research outputs found
DNA-Functionalized Gold Nanoparticles in Macromolecularly Crowded Polymer Solutions
DNA-functionalized gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are one
of the most
commonly used reagents in nanobiotechnology. They are important not
only for practical applications in analytical chemistry and drug delivery,
but also for fundamental understanding of nanoscience. For biological
samples such as blood serum or for intracellular applications, the
effects of crowded cellular proteins and nucleic acids need to be
considered. The thermodynamic effect of crowding is to induce nanoparticle
aggregation. But before such aggregation can take place, there might
also be a depletion repulsive barrier. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is
one of the most frequently used polymers to mimic the crowded cellular
environment. We show herein that while DNA-functionalized AuNPs are
very stable in buffer (e.g., no PEG) and citrate-capped AuNPs are
very stable in PEG, DNA-functionalized AuNPs are unstable in PEG and
are easily aggregated. Although such aggregation in PEG is mediated
by DNA, no sharp melting transition typical for DNA-linked AuNPs is
observed. We attribute this broad melting to depletion force instead
of DNA base pairing. The effects of PEG molecular weight, concentration
and temperature have been studied in detail and we also find an interesting
PEG phase separation and AuNP partition into the water-rich phase
at high temperature
Targeting Recycling Endosomes to Potentiate mRNA Lipid Nanoparticles
mRNA lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) have emerged as powerful
modalities
for gene therapies to control cancer and infectious and immune diseases.
Despite the escalating interest in mRNA-LNPs over the past few decades,
endosomal entrapment of delivered mRNAs vastly impedes therapeutic
developments. In addition, the molecular mechanism of LNP-mediated
mRNA delivery is poorly understood to guide further improvement through
rational design. To tackle these challenges, we characterized LNP-mediated
mRNA delivery using a library of small molecules targeting endosomal
trafficking. We found that the expression of delivered mRNAs is greatly
enhanced via inhibition of endocytic recycling in cells and in live
mice. One of the most potent small molecules, endosidine 5 (ES5),
interferes with recycling endosomes through Annexin A6, thereby promoting
the release and expression of mRNA into the cytoplasm. Together, these
findings suggest that targeting endosomal trafficking with small molecules
is a viable strategy to potentiate the efficacy of mRNA-LNPs
Regional Control of Multistimuli-Responsive Structural Color-Switching Surfaces by a Micropatterned DNA-Hydrogel Assembly
Structural
colors have advantages compared with chemical pigments
or dyes, such as iridescence, tunability, and unfading. Many studies
have focused on developing the ability to switch ON/OFF the structural
color; however, they often suffer from a simple and single stimulus,
remaining structural colors, and target selectivity. Herein, we present
regionally controlled multistimuli-responsive structural color switching
surfaces. The key part is the utilization of a micropatterned DNA-hydrogel
assembly on a single substrate. Each hydrogel network contains a unique
type of stimuli-responsive DNA motifs as an additional cross-linker
to exhibit swelling/deswelling via stimuli-responsive DNA interactions.
The approach enables overcoming the existing limitations and selectively
programming the DNA-hydrogel to a decrypted state (ON) and an encrypted
state (OFF) in response to multiple stimuli. Furthermore, the transitions
are reversible, providing cyclability. We envision the potential of
our method for diverse applications, such as sensors or anticounterfeiting,
requiring multistimuli-responsive structural color switching surfaces
