1. Academic Validation
  2. Electrical Stimulation Promotes Endocytosis of Magnetic Nanoparticles by Cancer Cells

Electrical Stimulation Promotes Endocytosis of Magnetic Nanoparticles by Cancer Cells

  • Small. 2024 Aug 10:e2403381. doi: 10.1002/smll.202403381.
Chao Wang 1 Guanlin Zhou 1 Xu Guo 1 Wei Zhang 1 Chengwei Wu 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Structural Analysis, Optimization and CAE Software for Industrial Equipment, School of Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, 116024, China.
Abstract

Nanomaterials are increasingly used in biomedical imaging and Cancer therapy, and how to improve the endocytosis of nanomaterials by cells is a key issue. The application of alternating current (AC) electrical stimulation to osteosarcoma cells (MG-63) here can increase the cellular endocytosis of Fe3O4 nanoparticles (diameter: 50 nm) by 52.46% via macropinocytosis. This can be ascribed to the decrease in F-actin content and the increase in intracellular CA2+ concentration. Transmission electron microscope, immunofluorescence staining, western blot, flow cytometry, and inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometer analyses support this interpretation. The application of electrical stimulation decreases the cell viability in magnetic hyperthermia by 47.6% and increases the signal intensity of magnetic resonance imaging by 29%. Similar enhanced endocytosis is observed for breast Cancer cells (MCF-7), glioblastoma cells (U-87 MG), melanoma cells (A-375), and bladder Cancer cells (TCCSUP), and also for Fe3O4 nanoparticles with the diameters of 20 and 100 nm, and Zn0.54Co0.46Cr0.65Fe1.35O4 nanoparticles with the diameter of 70 nm. It seems the electrical stimulation has the potential to improve the diagnostic and therapeutic effects of magnetic nanoparticles by promoting endocytosis.

Keywords

cancer cell; electrical stimulation; endocytosis; hyperthermia.

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