Fabrication of Positively Charged Fluorescent Polymer Nanoparticles for Cell Imaging and Gene Delivery

Nanotheranostics. 2018 Feb 15;2(2):157-167. doi: 10.7150/ntno.22988. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Development of efficient non-viral gene delivery vector has aroused great attention in the past few decades. In this study, we reported a new gene delivery vector, positively charged fluorescent conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNPs), for efficient gene transfection and in-situ intracellular fluorescence imaging. The microscopic and spectroscopic characterizations demonstrated that these CPNPs possess decent fluorescence performance (e.g. with fluorescence quantum yield of 70.7±0.3%) and small size dimension of ~3.6±0.3 nm (DLS result). Fast and efficient cellular translocation capability was observed according to the time-dependent living cell imaging experiments. Nearly all of the cells were loaded with CPNPs after co-incubation for 2 h regardless of the cell type. In comparison with the commonly used gene delivery vector, lipofectamine 2000 (with gene transfection efficiency of 55±5% for pEGFP), the gene expression efficiency with the positively charged CPNPs (70±3% for pEGFP) was improved significantly. Intracellular fluorescence imaging results demonstrated that the CPNPs could actively assemble close to the periphery of nuclei. Disassembly was not observed even 36 h later, which greatly facilitates releasing of pDNA close to the periphery of nuclei and thus promotes the gene transfection efficiency.

Keywords: Conjugated polymer nanoparticles; Fluorescence microscopy.; Gene delivery; Living cell imaging; Single particle imaging.