receptor T) cell therapies and gene therapy and can be re-injected into the patients for
therapeutic or prophylactic uses in complex genetic disorders.
17.3.1 Ex Vivo Applications
17.3.1.1 Alternative Approach to Viral Vector Delivery of CRISPR/Cas-9
in Animal and Plant Cells
Recently, CRISPR/Cas9 has emerged as a unique genome editing tool that enables
researchers to edit parts of the genome by deleting, modifying, adding, or inserting
desired DNA sequences. Although virus transduction is being used extensively in
delivery of CRISPR/Cas-9 in various organisms, they have some disadvantages,
such as the risk of cytotoxicity, immunogenicity, expensive large-scale production,
limited insertion size, and risk of integrating viral sequences into the target genome
(Glass et al. 2018). Therefore, nonviral delivery systems for CRISPR/Cas9 are a
promising alternative. Magnetofection has proved to be better than electroporation,
Fig. 17.3 Magnetofection increases the transfection efficiency. Magnetic nanoparticles are mixed
with the nucleic acids or other drugs and added to the cell culture plates, and a strong magnetic field
is applied under the tissue culture plates with a magnet. This helps in overcoming resistance by cell
membrane for hard to transfect cells lines leading to rapid uptake of magnetic nanoparticles by the
cells and release of coated drug inside the cells
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Targeted Gene Delivery Through Magnetofection: The New Face of Medicine
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