An optimized polymeric delivery system for piggyBac transposition

Author:

Meenakshi Sundaram Daniel Nisakar1ORCID,Bahadur K. C. Remant1,Fu Wei2,Uludağ Hasan13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, Faculty of Engineering University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

2. Institute of Pediatric Translational Medicine, Shanghai Children's Medical Center Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai China

3. Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe piggyBac transposon/transposase system has been explored for long‐term, stable gene expression to execute genomic integration of therapeutic genes, thus emerging as a strong alternative to viral transduction. Most studies with piggyBac transposition have employed physical methods for successful delivery of the necessary components of the piggyBac system into the cells. Very few studies have explored polymeric gene delivery systems. In this short communication, we report an effective delivery system based on low molecular polyethylenimine polymer with lipid substitution (PEI‐L) capable of delivering three components, (i) a piggyBac transposon plasmid DNA carrying a gene encoding green fluorescence protein (PB‐GFP), (ii) a piggyBac transposase plasmid DNA or mRNA, and (iii) a 2 kDa polyacrylic acid as additive for transfection enhancement, all in a single complex. We demonstrate an optimized formulation for stable GFP expression in two model cell lines, MDA‐MB‐231 and SUM149 recorded till day 108 (3.5 months) and day 43 (1.4 months), respectively, following a single treatment with very low cell number as starting material. Moreover, the stability of the transgene (GFP) expression mediated by piggyBac/PEI‐L transposition was retained following three consecutive cryopreservation cycles. The success of this study highlights the feasibility and potential of employing a polymeric delivery system to obtain piggyBac‐based stable expression of therapeutic genes.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Mitacs

Publisher

Wiley

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