Encapsulation of DNA by cationic diblock copolymer vesicles
A. V. Korobko, W. Jesse, and J. R. C. van der Maarel

TL;DR
This paper presents a method for encapsulating DNA within cationic diblock copolymer vesicles using a single emulsion technique, enabling controlled release and potential applications in gene delivery.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel encapsulation technique for DNA using cationic diblock copolymer vesicles, demonstrating controlled release and versatility for different DNA types.
Findings
Successful encapsulation of dsDNA and plasmids in vesicles.
Controlled DNA release triggered by osmotic pressure and ionic strength.
Versatility shown by encapsulating charge-inverted systems.
Abstract
Encapsulation of dsDNA fragments (contour length 54 nm) by the cationic diblock copolymer poly(butadiene-b-N-methyl 4-vinyl pyridinium) [PBd-b-P4VPQ] has been studied with phase contrast, polarized light, and fluorescence microscopy, as well as scanning electron microscopy. Encapsulation was achieved with a single emulsion technique. For this purpose, an aqueous DNA solution is emulsified in an organic solvent (toluene) and stabilized by the amphiphilic diblock copolymer. The PBd block forms an interfacial brush, whereas the cationic P4VPQ block complexes with DNA. A subsequent change of the quality of the organic solvent results in a collapse of the PBd brush and the formation of a capsule. Inside the capsules, the DNA is compacted as shown by the appearance of birefringent textures under crossed polarizers and the increase in fluorescence intensity of labeled DNA. The capsules can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry · RNA Interference and Gene Delivery · Advanced Polymer Synthesis and Characterization
