DNA nanostructures have evoked great interest as potential therapeutics and diagnostics due to ease and robustness of programming their shapes, site-specific functionalizations and responsive behaviours. However, their utility in biological fluids can be compromised through denaturation induced by physiological salt concentrations and degradation mediated by nucleases. Here we demonstrate that DNA nanostructures coated by oligolysines to 0.5:1 N:P (ratio of nitrogen in lysine to phosphorus in DNA), are stable in low salt and up to tenfold more resistant to DNase I digestion than when uncoated. Higher N:P ratios can lead to aggregation, but this can be circumvented by coating instead with an oligolysine-PEG copolymer, enabling up to a 1,000-fold protection against digestion by serum nucleases. Oligolysine-PEG-stabilized DNA nanostructures survive uptake into endosomal compartments and, in a mouse model, exhibit a modest increase in pharmacokinetic bioavailability. Thus, oligolysine-PEG is a one-step, structure-independent approach that provides low-cost and effective protection of DNA nanostructures for in vivo applications.
Designer nanoparticles with controlled shapes and sizes are increasingly popular vehicles for therapeutic delivery due to their enhanced cell-delivery performance. However, our ability to fashion nanoparticles has offered only limited control over these parameters. Structural DNA nanotechnology has an unparalleled ability to self-assemble three-dimensional nanostructures with near-atomic resolution features, and thus, it offers an attractive platform for the systematic exploration of the parameter space relevant to nanoparticle uptake by living cells. In this study, we examined the cell uptake of a panel of 11 distinct DNA-origami shapes, with the largest dimension ranging from 50-400 nm, in 3 different cell lines. We found that larger particles with a greater compactness were preferentially internalized compared with elongated, high-aspect-ratio particles. Uptake kinetics were also found to be more cell-type-dependent than shape-dependent, with specialized endocytosing dendritic cells failing to saturate over 12 h of study. The knowledge gained in the current study furthers our understanding of how particle shape affects cellular uptake and heralds the development of DNA nanotechnologies toward the improvement of current state-of-the-art cell-delivery vehicles.
DNA nanostructures (DNs) have garnered a large amount of interest as a potential therapeutic modality. However, DNs are prone to nuclease-mediated degradation and are unstable in low Mg 2+ conditions; this greatly limits their utility in physiological settings. Previously, PEGylated oligolysines were found to protect DNs against low-salt denaturation and to increase nuclease resistance by up to ∼400-fold. Here we demonstrate that glutaraldehyde cross-linking of PEGylated oligolysine-coated DNs extends survival by up to another ∼250-fold to >48 h during incubation with 2600 times the physiological concentration of DNase I. DNA origami with cross-linked oligolysine coats are non-toxic and are internalized into cells more readily than non-cross-linked origami. Our strategy provides an off-the-shelf and generalizable method for protecting DNs in vivo.
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