Advanced Functional Materials, Vol.19, No.19, 3112-3118, 2009
Lipid-Like Nanoparticles for Small Interfering RNA Delivery to Endothelial Cells
Here, nanoparticles composed of lipid-like materials (lipidoids) to facilitate non-viral delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA) to endothelial cells (ECs) are developed. Nanoparticles composed of siRNA and lipidoids with small size (similar to 200 nm) and positive charge (similar to 34 mV) are formed by self-assembly of lipidoids and siRNA. Ten lipidoids are synthesized and screeened for their ability to facilitate the delivery of siRNA into ECs. Particles composed of leading lipidoids show significantly better delivery to ECs than a leading commercially available transfection reagent, Lipofectamine 2000. As a model of potential therapeutic application, nanoparticles composed of the top performing lipidoid, NA114, are studied for their ability to deliver siRNA targeting anti-angiogenic factor (SHP-1) to human ECs. Silencing of SHP-1 expression significantly enhances EC proliferation and decreases EC apoptosis under a simulated ischemic condition.