Cell death induced by the application of alternating magnetic fields to nanoparticle-loaded dendritic cells
I. Marcos-Campos, L. As\'in, T. E. Torres, C. Marquina, A. Tres, M. R., Ibarra, G. F. Goya

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that magnetic nanoparticles loaded into dendritic cells can be selectively killed using alternating magnetic fields without raising the temperature, suggesting a potential approach for targeted tumor therapy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to induce selective cell death in nanoparticle-loaded dendritic cells using external magnetic fields, without thermal effects.
Findings
Magnetic nanoparticle-loaded dendritic cells can be selectively killed by AMF.
Cell viability drops from 90% to 2-5% after AMF exposure.
No significant temperature increase during magnetic field application.
Abstract
In this work, the capability of primary, monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) to uptake iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) is assessed and a strategy to induce selective cell death in these MNP-loaded DCs using external alternating magnetic fields (AMFs) is reported. No significant decrease in the cell viability of MNP-loaded DCs, compared to the control samples, was observed after five days of culture. The amount of MNPs incorporated into the cytoplasm was measured by magnetometry, which confirmed that 1 to 5 pg of the particles were uploaded per cell. The intracellular distribution of these MNPs, assessed by transmission electron microscopy, was found to be primarily inside the endosomic structures. These cells were then subjected to an AMF for 30 min, and the viability of the blank DCs (i.e., without MNPs), which were used as control samples, remained essentially unaffected.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
