@article {2474, title = {Skin-Permeable Nano-Lithocholic Lipidoid Efficiently Alleviates Psoriasis-like Chronic Skin Inflammations.}, journal = {ACS Appl Mater Interfaces}, year = {2022}, month = {2022 Mar 29}, abstract = {

Long-term application of topical therapeutics for psoriasis has a plethora of side effects. Additionally, skin-permeating agents used in their formulations for deeper dermal delivery damage the skin. To address these limitations, we developed novel lithocholic acid analogues that could form lipid nanoparticles (nano-LCs) spontaneously in the aqueous milieu, permeate through the skin, penetrate the deeper dermal layers, and exert anti-inflammatory effects against psoriasis-like chronic skin inflammations. Prior findings demonstrated that lithocholic acid acts as a vitamin D receptor agonist without affecting the Ca metabolism and also as an antagonist for ephrin type-A receptor 2 (EphA2). Taking cues from the previous findings, lithocholic acid derivatives with twin alkyl chains (LC6, LC8, LC10, and LC-12) were synthesized, nanoparticles (nano-LCs) were prepared, and they were evaluated for their skin permeability and anti-inflammatory properties. Among these nano-LCs, nano-LC10 demonstrated superior anti-inflammatory properties and inhibition of keratinocyte proliferation in various cell-based evaluations. Furthermore, the therapeutic efficiency of nano-LC10 was evaluated in an imiquimod-induced psoriasis-like mouse model and demonstrated comparable efficiency with the standard topical formulation, Sorvate, in reducing skin inflammations. Nano-LC10 also reduced systemic inflammation, organ toxicity, and also proinflammatory serum cytokine levels. Overall, nano-lithocholic lipidoid (nano-LC10) can be a potential novel class of therapeutics for topical application in treating psoriasis.

}, issn = {1944-8252}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.1c19180}, author = {Rachamalla, Hari Krishnareddy and Voshavar, Chandrashekhar and Arjunan, Porkizhi and Mahalingam, Gokulnath and Chowath, Rashmi Praksash and Banerjee, Rajkumar and Vemula, Praveen Kumar and Marepally, Srujan} } @article {1201, title = {Scaling the effect of hydrophobic chain length on gene transfer properties of di-alkyl{,} di-hydroxy ethylammonium chloride based cationic amphiphiles}, journal = {RSC Adv.}, volume = {7}, year = {2017}, pages = {25398-25405}, abstract = {

The success of gene therapy critically depends on the availability of efficient transfection vectors. Cationic lipids are the most widely studied non-viral vectors. The molecular architecture of the cationic lipid determines its transfection efficiency. Variations in alkyl chain lengths of lipids influence self-assembly and liposomal fusion with the cell membrane. These factors determine the transfection ability of the lipid. Thus{,} to probe the effect of asymmetry in hydrophobic chains on transfection efficiency{,} we designed and synthesized a series of cationic lipids by systematically varying one of the two alkyl chains linked to the quaternary nitrogen centre from C18 to C10 and keeping the other alkyl C18 chain constant (Lip1818-Lip1810). Transfection studies in multiple cultured mammalian cells (CHO{,} B16F10 and HeLa) revealed that the lipids with C18:C14 and C18:C12 alkyl chains (Lip1814 \& Lip1812) showed 20-30\% higher transfection efficacies than their counterparts at 2 : 1 and 4 : 1 lipid to pDNA charge ratios. Cryo-transmission electron images showed unilamellar vesicle structures for the liposomes of lipids. Mechanistic studies involving Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS) revealed that asymmetry in the hydrophobic region has a significant impact on liposomal fusion with the plasma membrane model. Collectively{,} these findings demonstrate that chain length asymmetry in the hydrophobic region of cationic lipids has an important role in their liposome-DNA interactions at optimal 2 : 1 and 4 : 1 lipid to pDNA charge ratios{,} which in turn modulates their gene transfer properties.

}, doi = {10.1039/C7RA02271A}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C7RA02271A}, author = {Hiwale, Ankita A. and Voshavar, Chandrashekhar and Dharmalingam, Priya and Dhayani, Ashish and Mukthavaram, Rajesh and Nadella, Rasajna and Sunnapu, Omprakash and Gandhi, Sivaraman and Naidu, V. G. M. and Chaudhuri, Arabinda and Marepally, Srujan and Vemula, Praveen Kumar} }