Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection

A process of low-energy ion-beam-induced gene transfection in human cancer cells was developed for non-viral DNA transfection. The whole process included maintenance of the cells in vacuum, ion beam bombardment of the cells with optimized ion beam condition leading to a medium cell viability, and DN...

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Main Authors: W. Wongkham, R. Sririwichitchai, K. Inthanon, T. Puangwanna, M. Nambuddee, P. Thongkumkoon, K. Prakrajang, L. D. Yu
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52683
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-526832018-09-04T09:36:55Z Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection W. Wongkham R. Sririwichitchai K. Inthanon T. Puangwanna M. Nambuddee P. Thongkumkoon K. Prakrajang L. D. Yu Materials Science Physics and Astronomy A process of low-energy ion-beam-induced gene transfection in human cancer cells was developed for non-viral DNA transfection. The whole process included maintenance of the cells in vacuum, ion beam bombardment of the cells with optimized ion beam condition leading to a medium cell viability, and DNA transfer. A method of using a specially designed liquid-nitrogen cooled sample holder to house the cells and frozen medium to cover and protect the cells was adopted to maintain the cells viable in the vacuum condition during ion beam bombardment. Nitrogen ion beams with energy in the range 7-28 keV were used to bombard human cancer cells (HEp-2, the human laryngeal epitheloid cancer cell line) to fluence orders of 1015-1016ions/cm2. After ion beam bombardment, the cell viability was studied. The ion beam condition which resulted in a relatively medium viability of the cells was chosen to operate ion bombardment to induce gene transfection. To the viable cells, DNA transfection using plasmid DNA pEGFPN2 was carried out. The experiment demonstrated that under appropriately controlled ion beam conditions and freezing environment, the human cells could survive and be transfected with exogenous DNA. This technique could be used as an alternative of non-viral gene transfections with a promising efficiency. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. 2018-09-04T09:30:24Z 2018-09-04T09:30:24Z 2013-04-01 Journal 0042207X 2-s2.0-84868565874 10.1016/j.vacuum.2012.10.009 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84868565874&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52683
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Materials Science
Physics and Astronomy
spellingShingle Materials Science
Physics and Astronomy
W. Wongkham
R. Sririwichitchai
K. Inthanon
T. Puangwanna
M. Nambuddee
P. Thongkumkoon
K. Prakrajang
L. D. Yu
Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
description A process of low-energy ion-beam-induced gene transfection in human cancer cells was developed for non-viral DNA transfection. The whole process included maintenance of the cells in vacuum, ion beam bombardment of the cells with optimized ion beam condition leading to a medium cell viability, and DNA transfer. A method of using a specially designed liquid-nitrogen cooled sample holder to house the cells and frozen medium to cover and protect the cells was adopted to maintain the cells viable in the vacuum condition during ion beam bombardment. Nitrogen ion beams with energy in the range 7-28 keV were used to bombard human cancer cells (HEp-2, the human laryngeal epitheloid cancer cell line) to fluence orders of 1015-1016ions/cm2. After ion beam bombardment, the cell viability was studied. The ion beam condition which resulted in a relatively medium viability of the cells was chosen to operate ion bombardment to induce gene transfection. To the viable cells, DNA transfection using plasmid DNA pEGFPN2 was carried out. The experiment demonstrated that under appropriately controlled ion beam conditions and freezing environment, the human cells could survive and be transfected with exogenous DNA. This technique could be used as an alternative of non-viral gene transfections with a promising efficiency. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format Journal
author W. Wongkham
R. Sririwichitchai
K. Inthanon
T. Puangwanna
M. Nambuddee
P. Thongkumkoon
K. Prakrajang
L. D. Yu
author_facet W. Wongkham
R. Sririwichitchai
K. Inthanon
T. Puangwanna
M. Nambuddee
P. Thongkumkoon
K. Prakrajang
L. D. Yu
author_sort W. Wongkham
title Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
title_short Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
title_full Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
title_fullStr Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
title_full_unstemmed Low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce DNA transfection
title_sort low-energy ion beam bombardment of human cancer cells in vacuum to induce dna transfection
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84868565874&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52683
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