Original Article
Molecular Therapy (2006) 13, 422–428; doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2005.10.004
Intracellular Trafficking of Plasmids during Transfection Is Mediated by Microtubules
Erin E. Vaughan1 and David A. Dean1
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA
Correspondence: David A. Dean, Fax: +1 312 908 4650. E-mail: dean@northwestern.edu
Received 20 September 2005; Revised 12 October 2005; Accepted 14 October 2005.
Abstract
Little is known about how plasmids move through the cytoplasm to the nucleus. It has been suggested that the dense latticework of the cytoskeleton impedes free diffusion of large macromolecules, including DNA. However, since transfections do work, there must be mechanisms by which DNA circumvents cytoplasmic obstacles. One possibility is that plasmids become cargo on cytoskeletal motors, much like viruses do, and move to the nucleus in a directed fashion. Using microinjection and electroporation approaches in the presence of drugs that alter the dynamics and organization of the cytoskeleton, we show that microtubules are involved in plasmid trafficking to the nucleus. Further, by co-injecting inhibitory antibodies, we find that dynein likely facilitates this movement. These results were confirmed using an in vitro spin-down assay that demonstrated that plasmids bind to microtubules through adaptor proteins provided by cytoplasmic extracts. Taken together, these results suggest that plasmids, like most viruses, utilize the microtubule network and its associated motor proteins to traffic through the cytoplasm to the nucleus.
Keywords:
electroporation, gene therapy, transfection, lipoplex, dynein, cytoskeleton
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