Background of PEI Transfection Reagents

About 50 years ago, Theodore Friedmann and Richard Roblin proposed using “good” exogenous DNA to replace “defective” DNA to cure human genetic diseases—the earliest idea of gene therapy. Naked DNA is easily degraded by nucleases, so researchers have spent decades developing safe, efficient delivery vectors. Viral vectors showed high transfection efficiency but suffer from severe immune responses, limited cargo size, and high cost. Consequently, non-viral vectors emerged, including organic carriers like cationic polymers, liposomes, dendrimers, and micelles, and inorganic carriers like metals and quantum dots. These carriers are easy to synthesize, have low immunogenicity, and package nucleic acids efficiently. PEI was developed in this context and has been widely applied in nucleic acid transfection.

Figure 1. Polymeric vectors used for nucleic acid delivery

Figure 1. Polymeric vectors used for nucleic acid delivery

Relationship Between PEI Structure and Transfection

PEI (polyethylenimine) exists as linear PEI (lPEI) and branched PEI (bPEI), depending on synthesis. At the same molecular weight, bPEI compresses nucleic acids more effectively, but lPEI has lower toxicity and higher in vivo efficiency. Free PEI chain length also affects transfection: longer free chains improve efficiency but increase cytotoxicity. Transfection efficiency positively correlates with PEI molecular weight, while toxicity is inversely correlated.

Figure 2. Structures of linear and branched PEI
Figure 2. Structures of linear and branched PEI

Figure 2. Structures of linear and branched PEI

Mechanism of PEI Transfection

PEI is considered the “gold standard” for delivering pDNA, miRNA, and siRNA. It compresses negatively charged nucleic acids into cationic complexes that bind to negatively charged cell surface proteoglycans and enter cells via endocytosis. After uptake into early endosomes, escape into the cytosol or nucleus is required. Two mechanisms facilitate this:

  • Membrane perforation—PEI interacts with anionic endosomal lipids to form pores.
  • Osmotic swelling/rupture—unprotonated amines in PEI act as a proton sponge, causing proton influx and endosomal swelling that leads to rupture.
Figure 3. In vivo delivery of nucleic acids

Figure 3. In vivo delivery of nucleic acids

RNA is released into the cytoplasm to act biologically, while DNA travels to the nucleus via nuclear pores. Because PEI complexes can nonspecifically interact with serum proteins, it is recommended to prepare the complexes in serum-free conditions.

References:

Cuiping Jiang, Jiatong Chen, Zhuoting Li, Zitong Wang, Wenli Zhang & Jianping Liu (2019): Recent advances in the development of polyethylenimine-based gene vectors for safe and efficient gene delivery, Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery, DOI: 10.1080/17425247.2019.1604681

Alexandra S. PiotrowskiDaspit, Amy C. Kauffman, Laura G. Bracaglia, et al. Polymeric Vehicles for Nucleic Acid Delivery [J]. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2020;156:119–132. doi:10.1016/j.addr.2020.06.014

Related Products

Product Name

Specification

Cat No.

Hieff Trans™ PEI Transfection Reagent

1.5 mL/10 mL/100 mL

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100 μL/1 mL/10 mL/100 mL

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Polyethylenimine Linear(PEI) MW 25000

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