Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.376, No.1, 200-205, 2008
Effective delivery of antisense peptide nucleic acid oligomers into cells by anthrax protective antigen
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is highly stable and binds to complementary RNA and DNA with high affinity, but it resists cellular uptake, thereby limiting its bioavailability. We investigated whether protective antigen (PA, a non-toxic component of anthrax toxin) could transport antisense PNA oligomers into reporter cells that contain luciferase transgenes with mutant beta-globin IVS2 intronic inserts, which permit aberrant pre-mRNA splicing and impair luciferase expression. PNA oligomers antisense to mutant splice sites in these IVS2 inserts induced luciferase expression when effectively delivered into the cells. PNA 18-mers with C-terminal poly-lysine tails [PNA(Lys)(8)] demonstrated modest sequence-specific antisense activity by themselves at micromolar concentrations in luc-IVS2 reporter cell cultures. However, this activity was greatly amplified by PA. Antisense PNA(Lys)(8) with but not without PA also corrected the IVS2-654 beta-globin splice defect in cultured erythroid precursor cells from a patient with beta-thalassemia [genotype, IVS2-654(beta(O)/beta(E))], providing further evidence that anthrax PA can effectively transport antisense PNA oligomers into cells. Published by Elsevier Inc.