Principle The term magnetofection, currently
trademarked by the company OZ Biosciences, combines the words magnetic and transfection. Magnetofection uses nucleic acids associated with
magnetic nanoparticles. These molecular complexes are then concentrated and transported into
cells using an applied
magnetic field.
Synthesis The
magnetic nanoparticles are typically made from
iron oxide, which is fully biodegradable, using methods such as
coprecipitation or
microemulsion. The nanoparticles are then combined with gene vectors (
DNA,
siRNA,
ODN,
virus, etc.). One method involves linking viral particles to magnetic particles using an
avidin-
biotin interaction. Viruses can also bind to the nanoparticles via
hydrophobic interaction. Another synthesis method involves coating magnetic nanoparticles with cationic lipids or polymers via salt-induced aggregation. For example, nanoparticles may be conjugated with the
polyethylenimine (PEI), a positively charged polymer used commonly as a transfection agent. The PEI solution must have a high pH during synthesis to encourage high gene expression. The positively charged nanoparticles can then associate with negatively charged nucleic acids via
electrostatic interaction.
Cellular uptake Magnetic particles loaded with vectors are concentrated on the target cells by the influence of an external magnetic field. The cells then take up genetic material naturally via
endocytosis and
pinocytosis. Consequently, membrane architecture and structure stays intact, in contrast to other physical transfection methods such as
electroporation or
gene guns that damage the cell membrane. The nucleic acids are then released into the
cytoplasm by different mechanisms depending upon the formulation used: • the
proton sponge effect caused by cationic polymers coated on the nanoparticles that promote
endosome osmotic swelling, disruption of the
endosome membrane and intracellular release of DNA form, • the destabilization of endosome by cationic
lipids coated on the particles that release the
nucleic acid into cells by flip-flop of cell negative lipids and charge neutralization and • the viral infection mechanism. Magnetofection works with cells that are not dividing or slowly dividing, meaning that the genetic materials can go to the
cell nucleus without
cell division. ==Applications==