Abstract
Ultrasound-mediated cell membrane permeabilization – sonoporation, enhances drug delivery directly to tumor sites while reducing systemic side effects. The potential of ultrasound to augment intracellular calcium uptake – a critical regulator of cell death and proliferation – offers innovative alternative to conventional chemotherapy. However, calcium therapeutic applications remain underexplored in sonoporation studies. This research provides a comprehensive analysis of calcium sonoporation (CaSP), which combines ultrasound treatment with calcium ions and SonoVue microbubbles, on gastrointestinal cancer cells LoVo and HPAF-II. Initially, optimal sonoporation parameters were determined: an acoustic wave of 1 MHz frequency with a 50 % duty cycle at intensity of 2 W/cm2. Subsequently, various cellular bioeffects, such as viability, oxidative stress, metabolism, mitochondrial function, proliferation, and cell death, were assessed following CaSP treatment. CaSP significantly impaired cancer cell function by inducing oxidative and metabolic stress, evidenced by increased mitochondrial depolarization, decreased ATP levels, and elevated glucose uptake in a Ca2+ dose-dependent manner, leading to activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. Cellular response to CaSP depended on the TP53 gene's mutational status: colon cancer cells were more susceptible to CaSP-induced apoptosis and G1 phase cell cycle arrest, whereas pancreatic cancer cells showed a higher necrotic response and G2 cell cycle arrest. These promising results encourage future research to optimize sonoporation parameters for clinical use, investigate synergistic effects with existing treatments, and assess long-term safety and efficacy in vivo. Our study highlights CaSP's clinical potential for improved safety and efficacy in cancer therapy, offering significant implications for the pharmaceutical and biomedical fields.
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