The conception of novel anticancer delivery systems and the combination of chronobiology with nanotechnology may provide a powerful tool to optimize cancer therapy. In this work, polyethylenimine (PEI) has been used to complex p53 encoded plasmid DNA (pDNA), and the anticancer drug methotrexate (MTX) has also been loaded into the vectors. To investigate the influence of circadian clock on drug/gene delivery efficiency, HeLa, C33A and fibroblast cells have been transfected with developed PEI/pDNA/MTX delivery vectors at six different time points. Phenomena as the cellular uptake/internalization, drug/gene delivery and p53 protein production have been evaluated. The cell-associated MTX fluorescence have been monitored, and p53 protein levels quantified. In HeLa and C33A cancer cells, significant levels of MTX were found for T8 and T12. For these time points, a high amount of p53 protein was quantified. Confocal microscopy images showed successful HeLa cell's uptake of PEI/pDNA/MTX particles, at T8. In comparison, poor levels of MTX and p53 protein were found in fibroblasts; nevertheless, results indicated rhythmicity. Data demonstrate the influence of circadian rhythm on both cancer-cells targeting ability and transfection performance of PEI/pDNA/MTX carriers and seemed to provide the optimum time for drug/gene delivery. This report adds a great contribution to the field of cancer chronobiology, highlighting the relationship between circadian rhythm and nanodelivery systems, and charting the path for further research on a, yet, poorly explored but promising topic.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8875434PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14040681DOI Listing

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