Abstract

In this study, we assessed the inhibitory potential of magnetic liposomes as gene vectors targeting human non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) growth In Vitro via hairpin RNA (shRNA) under the influence of an external magnetic field. Specifically, we engineered the plasmid pGFPshIGF-1R to co-express green fluorescent protein (GFP) and shRNA against insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R), a gene associated with NSCLC progression. Utilizing superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (CombiMAG) and Lipofectamine2000,we constructed magnetic liposomes to deliver pGFPshIGF-1R into A549 NSCLC cells. Varying magnetic field strengths and exposure times were employed. The efficacy of transfection was gauged against liposome-only methods using Western blot analysis to measure IGF-1R protein reduction. In Vitro, the magnetic approach exhibited higher transfection efficiency (66.3%) compared to liposomes alone (22.1%), marking a threefold enhancement. In vivo, using a subcutaneous A549 tumor model in nude mice, shRNA-transfected A549 cells displayed substantial IGF-1R protein inhibition (interference rates: 56.1% and 85.1%). Importantly, magnetic transfection outperformed liposomal transfection in suppressing IGF-1R protein expression (P <0.05). Our findings suggest that magnetic liposome-mediated gene delivery, facilitated by an external magnetic field, holds promise as a targeted and safe therapeutic strategy for lung cancer.

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