Gene
therapy is likely to be the most promising way to tackle cancer,
while defects in molecular strategies and delivery systems have led
to an impasse in clinical application. Here, it is found that onco-miRNAs
of the miR-515 and -449 families were upregulated in hepatocellular
carcinoma (HCC), and the sponge targeting miR-515 family had a significant
probability to suppress cancer cell proliferation. Then, we constructed
non-toxic sponge-loaded magnetic nanodroplets containing 20% C6F14
(SLMNDs-20%) that are incorporated with fluorinated superparamagnetic
iron oxide nanoparticles enhancing external magnetism-assisted targeting
and enabling a direct visualization of SLMNDs-20% distribution <i>in vivo</i> via magnetic resonance imaging monitoring. SLMNDs-20%
could be vaporized by programmable focused ultrasound (FUS) activation,
achieving ∼45% <i>in vitro</i> sponge delivery efficiency
and significantly enhancing <i>in vivo</i> sponge delivery
without a clear apoptosis. Moreover, the sponge-1-carrying SLMNDs-20%
could effectively suppress proliferation of xenograft HCC after FUS
exposure because sponge-1-suppressing onco-miR-515 enhanced the expression
of anti-oncogenes (P21, CD22, TIMP1, NFKB, and E-cadherin) in cancer
cells. The current results indicated that ultrasonic cavitation-inducing
sonoporation enhanced the intracellular delivery of sponge-1 using
SLMNDs-20% after magnetic-assisted accumulation, which was a therapeutic
approach to inhibit HCC progression.