A supplement providing a snapshot of the latest developments in chemical biology
Supramolecular chemistry silences genes
13 June 2006
Dendrimers can be used to switch off specific genes, say chemists in France and China.

PAMAM dendrimers, highly branched polymers with amine groups covering their surface, are known to bind DNA. Peng showed that these dendrimers also strongly bind siRNA. The resulting spherical nanoparticles are able to deliver the siRNA into cells effectively, while protecting it from RNA-digesting enzymes, Peng said.
The researchers used their system to silence a target gene in human lung cancer cells. The siRNA was released slowly by the dendrimer, giving long-term gene silencing that remained 50% effective even after 72 hours, said Peng.
Being able to down-regulate, or silence, genes is an effective tool for investigating what a particular gene does, said Peng. The same procedure could be used in future medicines, switching off genes associated with disease, Peng said.
- Andrew Marsh
James Mitchell Crow
References
Jiehua Zhou, Jiangyu Wu, Nadia Hafdi, Jean-Paul Behr, Patrick Erbacher and Ling Peng, Chem. Commun., 2006, 2362
DOI: 10.1039/b601381c
