Content area

Abstract

The controlled delivery of nucleic acids to selected tissues remains an inefficient process mired by low transfection efficacy, poor scalability because of varying efficiency with cell type and location, and questionable safety as a result of toxicity issues arising from the typical materials and procedures employed. High efficiency and minimal toxicity in vitro has been shown for intracellular delivery of nuclei acids by using nanoneedles, yet extending these characteristics to in vivo delivery has been difficult, as current interfacing strategies rely on complex equipment or active cell internalization through prolonged interfacing. Here, we show that a tunable array of biodegradable nanoneedles fabricated by metal-assisted chemical etching of silicon can access the cytosol to co-deliver DNA and siRNA with an efficiency greater than 90%, and that in vivo the nanoneedles transfect the VEGF-165 gene, inducing sustained neovascularization and a localized sixfold increase in blood perfusion in a target region of the muscle.

Details

Title
Biodegradable silicon nanoneedles delivering nucleic acids intracellularly induce localized in vivo neovascularization
Author
Chiappini, C; De Rosa, E; Martinez, J O; Liu, X; Steele, J; Stevens, M M; Tasciotti, E
Pages
532-539
Publication year
2015
Publication date
May 2015
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
14761122
e-ISSN
14764660
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1767086620
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group May 2015