Molecular simulation analysis of structural variations in lipoplexes
Oded Farago, Niels Gr{\o}nbech-Jensen

TL;DR
This study uses coarse-grained molecular simulations to analyze the structural variations of lipoplexes, revealing lamellar and disordered phases, and comparing results with experimental scattering data to understand gene delivery efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a molecular simulation approach to study lipoplex structures and correlates simulated scattering data with experimental results, highlighting structural transitions.
Findings
Lamellar structures form with increased lipid stiffness.
Simulated scattering plots match experimental data.
Disordered structures emerge at high charged lipid fractions.
Abstract
We use a coarse-grained molecular model to study the self-assembly process of complexes of cationic and neutral lipids with DNA molecules ("lipoplexes") - a promising nonviral carrier of DNA for gene therapy. We identify the resulting structures through direct visualization of the molecular arrangements and through calculations of the corresponding scattering plots. The latter approach provides a means for comparison with published data from X-ray scattering experiments. Consistent with experimental results, we find that upon increasing the stiffness of the lipid material, the system tends to form lamellar structures. Two characteristic distances can be extracted from the scattering plots of lamellar complexes - the lamellar (interlayer) spacing and the DNA-spacing within each layer. We find a remarkable agreement between the computed values of these two quantities and the experimental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry
