Deagglomeration of DNA nanomedicine carriers using controlled ultrasonication

[Display omitted] •Controlled inertial cavitation produced reproducible particle deagglomeration.•The inertial cavitation dose did not affect the spiky morphology of the particles.•Surface chemical analysis confirmed the loading of the particles with plasmid.•Thorough analysis was achieved through c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ultrasonics sonochemistry 2022-09, Vol.89, p.106141-106141, Article 106141
Hauptverfasser: Hinchliffe, Beth A., Turner, Piers, J. H. Cant, David, De Santis, Emiliana, Aggarwal, Purnank, Harris, Rob, Templeton, David, Shard, Alex G., Hodnett, Mark, Minelli, Caterina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Controlled inertial cavitation produced reproducible particle deagglomeration.•The inertial cavitation dose did not affect the spiky morphology of the particles.•Surface chemical analysis confirmed the loading of the particles with plasmid.•Thorough analysis was achieved through complementary methods. Control over the agglomeration state of manufactured particle systems for drug and oligonucleotide intracellular delivery is paramount to ensure reproducible and scalable therapeutic efficacy. Ultrasonication is a well-established mechanism for the deagglomeration of bulk powders in dispersion. Its use in manufacturing requires strict control of the uniformity and reproducibility of the cavitation field within the sample volume to minimise within-batch and batch-to-batch variability. In this work, we demonstrate the use of a reference cavitating vessel which provides stable and reproducible cavitation fields over litre-scale volumes to assist the controlled deagglomeration of a novel non-viral particle-based plasmid delivery system. The system is the Nuvec delivery platform, comprising polyethylenimine-coated spiky silica particles with diameters of ∼ 200 nm. We evaluated the use of controlled cavitation at different input powers and stages of preparation, for example before and after plasmid loading. Plasmid loading was confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and gel electrophoresis. The latter was also used to assess plasmid integrity and the ability of the particles to protect plasmid from potential degradation caused by the deagglomeration process. We show the utility of laser diffraction and differential centrifugal sedimentation in quantifying the efficacy of product de-agglomeration in the microscale and nanoscale size range respectively. Transmission electron microscopy was used to assess potential damages to the silica particle structure due to the sonication process.
ISSN:1350-4177
1873-2828
DOI:10.1016/j.ultsonch.2022.106141