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Research Article

Application of Ultrasonic Gas-Filled Liposomes in Enhancing Transfer for Breast Cancer–Related Antisense Oligonucleotides: An Experimental Study

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Pages 341-351 | Published online: 09 Dec 2008
 

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the application of ultrasonic gas-filled liposomes in enhancing transfer for breast cancer–related antisense oligonucleotides in vitro. An antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (AS-ODN) sequence, HA2741, modified with luciferase reporter plasmid, was used in evaluating the enhancing effect of gas-filled liposomes for gene transfer in breast cancer cells. Some important factors on HA 2741 transfection efficiency, such as wave intensity, ultrasound duration, gas-filled liposome concentration, and HA2741 concentration, were tested, respectively. Transfection efficiency was detected by fluorescence microscopy. Cell viability was verified by propidium iodide assay. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and immunocytochemistry were used to detect the inhibitory effect of HA2741 on HER-2 expression. All the four factors (wave intensity, ultrasound duration, gas-filled liposome concentration, and HA2741 concentration) showed a positive effect on AS-ODN transfection efficiency. However, these factors had a negative effect on cell viability. Considering all the factors investigated, the maximum transfection efficiency with minimum cell viability achieved under 2% gas-filled liposome mixed with 80 nmol/L HA2741 for 30-second ultrasound exposure at −3.0dB wave intensity, which gave an overall transfection efficiency exceeding 90% and a cell viability near 90%. Under controlled conditions, ultrasound-mediated AS-ODN transfer, enhanced by gas-filled liposomes, may represent an effective, safe avenue for cancer-related gene delivery.

Notes

Authors Y-K. Luo., Y-Z. Zhao., and C-T. Lu. contributed equally to this work.

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