283g Biohybrid Nanoparticles and Hydrogel Platforms with on-Demand Release of Therapeutics by the Application of Nucleic Acid Triggers

Siddarth Venkatesh1, Jacek Wower2, and Mark E. Byrne1. (1) Biomimetic & Biohybrid Materials, Biomedical Devices, and Drug Delivery Laboratories, Department of Chemical Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849-5127, (2) Department of Animal Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849

The incorporation of nucleic acid constructs into hydrogels and nanoparticles can produce novel biomaterials with programmable on-demand switches or modulatory mechanisms, with unprecedented control and sensitivity. Here we demonstrate the controlled release of nucleic acid therapeutics loaded into hydrogels and nanoparticles via enzymatic and physical triggers. These novel biomaterials, designed using the principles of molecular biology, are expected to profoundly impact gene therapy regimes. Substrate non-specific (DNase I) enzymes were used to trigger the release of fluorescent neomycin immobilized onto gold nanoparticles. The neomycin molecules were bound by an unstructured thiolated oligonucleotide hybridized to the neomycin aptamer, which was isolated by affinity chromatography. Surface coverage densities of the DNA were quantified by using oligonucleotides with fluorescent dyes at the 3' end, and were optimized by varying buffer ionic strengths, reaction times and sonication. Release profiles of fluorescent neomycin were further tuned by creating an affinity spectrum of neomycin aptamers by isolating aptamers of varying binding affinities. Such novel schemes could be used for the intracellular delivery of multiple drugs from the same platform, as injectable systems targeted to specific cells using functionalized ligands such as folic acid.

Custom oligonucleotides, which were partially complementary to each other and had a programmed recognition site for the restriction endonuclease BamHI, were modified with a polymerizable acrylate functionality and 32P-labeled using T4 polynucleotide kinase. In-vitro hybridization and restriction enzyme digests were optimized in various concentrations of Tris buffer and water, and confirmed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Magnesium was determined to be critical for hybridization of the construct. About 10% of the complementary oligonucleotide self-annealed. The functional monomers used for hydrogel synthesis had no effect on hybridization efficiency. Digestion of the DNA helices was carried out by incubating the DNA helices with restriction enzyme BamHI and BamHI buffer. Incubation of the DNA double helix (without BamHI) on ice and at 37°C had no effect on the duplex. BamHI buffer did not disrupt the annealed duplex. Poly(acrylamide–co-N,N' methylene bisacrylamide-co-acrylated DNA) hydrogels were synthesized via redox polymerization and the unincorporated DNA was eluted by electrophoresis. The labeled complementary oligonucleotide, when polymerized into the hydrogel without the anchoring acrylated oligonucleotide, eluted readily from the hydrogel during electrophoresis whereas acrylated DNA duplex was readily incorporated into the network. Quantification of the polymerization process via electrophoresis and phosphoimaging indicated 70% capture of the acrylated DNA, 25 % unincorporated acrylated DNA, and 5% 32P-labeled oligonucleotide. A labeled oligonucleotide bearing a non-complementary sequence to the acrylated oligonucleotide did not get incorporated as annealing did not occur between the two strands. Release studies of 32P-labeled loaded DNA were conducted by incubating the DNA-loaded gels under physiological conditions in the presence of BamHI. The release of DNA due to the penetration of restriction enzyme was shown to be highly specific, with no release in the absence of BamHI, and the presence of another endonuclease, EcoRI. Temperature was used to release the 32P-labeled oligonucleotide as an alternative physical trigger. Temperature responsive release characteristics corresponded to the theoretical melting temperature of the helix (58°C). Poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate-co-polyethylene glycol 600 dimethacrylate-co-acrylated DNA) hydrogels of varying crosslinking densities were triggered to release DNA by the non-specific endonuclease DNase I. Release rate of DNA from biocompatible hydrogels varied inversely with the crosslinking densities, and consequently mesh size.

The physiological significance of this platform was demonstrated by delivering a deoxyribozyme, which bore a catalytic 10-23 motif and was specific to a HIV Tat/Rev mRNA. The HIV-1 Tat/Rev RNA was synthesized by in vitro transcription and labeled using [5'-32P]pCp and T4 RNA ligase. Incubation of the deoxyribozyme-loaded hydrogel and the HIV-1 Tat/Rev RNA resulted in down regulation of the gene. BamHI action on a hydrogel lacking the deoxyribozyme construct had no effect on the HIV-1 Tat/Rev RNA.