Gene Therapy: Cationic Lipids for Construction of Nonviral Vectors of Nucleic Acids

Authors

  • L. Drašar Department of Chemistry of Natural Compounds, Institute of Chemical Technology, Prague,
  • M. Ledvina Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague

Keywords:

gene therapy, vectors, liposome, transfection, lipoplex, cationic lipids

Abstract

Gene therapy is often used in clinical research. It is related to the delivery of nucleic acids and their components to patient by a vector. Most current vector techniques can be divided into viral and nonviral. Nonviral vectors, such as cationic liposomes, are less toxic, less immunogenic, and easier to prepare than viral vectors. Hence they are more attractive for clinical applications. This review focuses on the relations between the cationic lipid structure and its transfection activity. To understand the structure-activity relationships is of great importance for synthesis of novel cationic lipids.

Published

2012-07-15

How to Cite

Drašar, L., & Ledvina, M. (2012). Gene Therapy: Cationic Lipids for Construction of Nonviral Vectors of Nucleic Acids. Chemické Listy, 106(7), 646–652. Retrieved from http://blog.chemicke-listy.cz/ojs3/index.php/chemicke-listy/article/view/891

Issue

Section

Articles