Reduction of intimal hyperplasia in injured rat arteries promoted by catheter balloons coated with polyelectrolyte multilayers that contain plasmid DNA encoding PKC delta

TitleReduction of intimal hyperplasia in injured rat arteries promoted by catheter balloons coated with polyelectrolyte multilayers that contain plasmid DNA encoding PKC delta
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsBechler, SL, Si, Y, Yu, Y, Ren, J, Liu, B, Lynn, DM
JournalBiomaterials
Volume34
Pagination226-236
Date PublishedJan
Type of ArticleArticle
ISBN Number0142-9612
Accession NumberWOS:000311532400022
Keywordsangioplasty, biomedical applications, coronary-artery, drug-eluting, gene delivery, in-stent restenosis, Layer-by-layer, Polyelectrolyte multilayers, Thin films, Gene delivery, Intimal hyperplasia, polymer, protein-kinase-c, smooth-muscle-cells, stents, thin-films, us k, 1981, febs letters, v125, p49
Abstract

New therapeutic approaches that eliminate or reduce the occurrence of intimal hyperplasia following balloon angioplasty could improve the efficacy of vascular interventions and improve the quality of life of patients suffering from vascular diseases. Here, we report that treatment of arteries using catheter balloons coated with thin polyelectrolyte-based films ('polyelectrolyte multilayers', PEMs) can substantially reduce intimal hyperplasia in an in vivo rat model of vascular injury. We used a layer-by-layer (LbL) process to coat the surfaces of inflatable catheter balloons with PEMs composed of nanolayers of a cationic poly(beta-amino ester) (polymer 1) and plasmid DNA (pPKC delta) encoding the delta isoform of protein kinase C (PKC delta), a regulator of apoptosis and other cell processes that has been demonstrated to reduce intimal hyperplasia in injured arterial tissue when administered via perfusion using viral vectors. Insertion of balloons coated with polymer 1/pPKC delta multilayers into injured arteries for 20 min resulted in local transfer of DNA and elevated levels of PKC delta expression in the media of treated tissue three days after delivery. IFC and IHC analysis revealed these levels of expression to promote downstream cellular processes associated with up-regulation of apoptosis. Analysis of arterial tissue 14 days after treatment revealed polymer 1/pPKC delta-coated balloons to reduce the occurrence of intimal hyperplasia by similar to 60% compared to balloons coated with films containing empty plasmid vectors. Our results demonstrate the potential therapeutic value of this nanotechnology-based approach to local gene delivery in the clinically important context of balloon-mediated vascular interventions. These PEM-based methods could also prove useful for other in vivo applications that require short-term, sbrface-mediated transfer of plasmid DNA. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Short TitleBiomaterials