Semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) are increasingly being used as photoluminescen markers in biological imaging. Their brightness, large Stokes shift, and high photostability compared to organic fluorophores permit the exploration of biological phenomena at the single-molecule scale with superior temporal resolution and spatial precision. NCs have predominantly been used as extracellular markers for tagging and tracking membrane proteins. Successful internalization and intracellular labelling with NCs have been demonstrated for both fixed immunolabelled and live cells. However, the precise localization and subcellular compartment labelled are less clear. Generally, live cell studies are limited by the requirement of fairly invasive protocols for loading NCs and the relatively large size of NCs compared to the cellular machinery, along with the subsequent sequestration of NCs in endosomal/lysosomal compartments. For long-period observation the potential cytotoxicity of cytoplasmically loaded NCs must be evaluated. This review focuses on the challenges of intracellular uses of NCs.
Semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) are increasingly being used as photoluminescen markers in biological imaging. Their brightness, large Stokes shift, and high photostability compared to organic fluorophores permit the exploration of biological phenomena at the single-molecule scale with superior temporal resolution and spatial precision. NCs have predominantly been used as extracellular markers for tagging and tracking membrane proteins. Successful internalization and intracellular labelling with NCs have been demonstrated for both fixed immunolabelled and live cells. However, the precise localization and subcellular compartment labelled are less clear. Generally, live cell studies are limited by the requirement of fairly invasive protocols for loading NCs and the relatively large size of NCs compared to the cellular machinery, along with the subsequent sequestration of NCs in endosomal/lysosomal compartments. For long-period observation the potential cytotoxicity of cytoplasmically loaded NCs must be evaluated. This review focuses on the challenges of intracellular uses of NCs.
Semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) “quantum dots” are increasingly being used in a wide range of biomedical applications, from cell
biology to medical diagnostics. They have a core diameter of 2–10 nm and
significantly larger hydrodynamic diameter, making them suitable as large yet
relatively biocompatible markers, and have remarkable photophysical properties related
to quantum confinement effects [1]. Their superior brightness, higher photostability, and narrower
spectral emission compared to conventional organic fluorophores have
progressively lead biophysicists to adopt them as a new tool for
single-molecule imaging, in vitro
and in vivo. NCs have become an
alternative for organic
fluorophores and complementary tool of fluorescent proteins in single-molecule
fluorescence and whole-cell labelling assays.In this review, we focus on the intracellular
applications of semiconductor nanocrystals in biological imaging. We first
discuss their unique optical properties, we then introduce some considerations
on their surface chemistry and we explore in the following sections the different
possible strategies to deliver NC inside the cell and to specifically target
them to a protein of interest. Finally, we report on recent applications of NCs
in whole animal imaging in vivo
and address the risk of potential cytotoxicity.
2. CHEMICAL AND OPTICAL PROPERTIES
NCs are inorganic particles
of 200 to 1000 atoms. NC cores are commonly synthesized from group II-VI (e.g.,
CdSe, CdS, ZnSe, and CdTe) and III-V (e.g., InAs, InP, and PbS) semiconductor
materials. For any energy exceeding the band gap, which depends on the core
diameter, absorption of a photon generates an electron-hole pair, which on
recombination results in the emission of a less-energetic photon. Due to their
broad absorption spectra, NCs can efficiently be excited with a multitude of
laser lines. Variations in the particle composition and size result in
different band-gap energies and hence NCs different photoluminescent (PL)
emission, ranging from the near UV to the IR (400–1350 nm) [2]. NCs have narrow and symmetric photoluminescence (PL) emission
peaks with typical full widths at half maximum (FWHM) of 25–35 nm [3] that facilitate multicolour imaging by allowing efficient
single-colour excitation whilst minimizing emission cross-talk [4], see [5] for a critical discussion. Unlike with organic dyes, the PL
emission arises from the radiative recombination of an exciton. For NCs,
relaxation to the ground state takes nanoseconds, about one order of
magnitude longer than singlet-singlet electronic transitions in organic
fluorophores. The slow PL decay makes NCs attractive sources for time-gated
imaging, which can be used to reduce the relative contribution of cellular
autofluorescence to the total collected signal [6]. Figure 1 graphs the
evolution of the collected fraction of long-lived NC emission, relative to that
of the short-lived autofluorescence for different time gates Δt at a fixed lifetime ratio of 1:10. Larger gates are required to
attain the same suppression of background for increasing levels of
autofluorescence. For intensity-based detection NCs benefit from their large
brightness (ɛ ) which results from a 10-to-100 time larger molar extinction coefficients (– M−1cm1) than organic dyes [7, 8] at
comparable quantum yield . Finally, due to their significantly higher photostability than
organic fluorophores, NCs are attractive for long-period observation (LPO). The
resistance to photobleaching results from the deposition of an additional
semiconductor shell (e.g., ZnS or CdSe) having a larger band gap than the core.
The result is the confinement of the excitons to the core. However, NCs are not
completely inert to prolonged illumination. The photophysical properties
facilitate LPO at the single-NC level, a particularly interesting property in single-particle
tracking (SPT) applications [9],
tracing cell lineage [10], and
live animal imaging [11], that all combine the demand for imaging small numbers of
fluorophores over extended observation periods.
Figure 1
Time-gated acquisition of nanocrystal photoluminescence suppresses short-lived
autofluorescence, [6]. (a) Schematic
representation of the relative timing of the laser pulse (instantaneous, blue),
along with the normalized decays of autofluorescence (AF, purple, τ = 1 nanosecond), NC photoluminescence (NC,
green, τ = 10 nanoseconds),
and their sum (red), respectively. (b) Background rejection versus gate time. SNR is the ratio of the integrated
signal of the NC divided by the integrated signal of the AF. The numbers/colors
represent 5 different ratios /. To obtain the same
SNR at a higher level of AF, a larger time gate is required. The shift in time
is relative to the center of a sigmoidal function 1/(1 + exp (−T/t)) that
describes detector gating. We assumed a detector on response (10–90%), T = 4.4 nanoseconds. Thus, at Δt = 0
detection efficiency is 50%.
Beyond their established
function as molecular markers, NCs are increasingly being used for FRET-based
biosensing (see [12] for review). NCs are both a scaffold and central donor for exciting
multiple organic acceptor fluorophores in these inorganic/organic hybrid FRET
sensors [13-16]. Also, NCs are attractive FRET donors because, through selecting the
appropriate size, they can be dialed into almost arbitrary acceptors. The large
overlap integrals between donor emission and acceptor absorbance allow for
larger FRET efficiencies or transfer over larger donor/acceptor distances. Due
to the broad absorption bands and narrow-band emission, one can chose
excitation wavelengths minimizing direct acceptor excitation and minimal
bleed-through of donor fluorescence into the FRET detection channel.At the single-NC level, the
radiative recombination of the exciton can temporarily be prevented despite
ongoing excitation, resulting in intermittent PL emission, known as “blinking” [17]. Blinking results from the stabilization of the exciton at the NC
surface and is associated with surface defects. Dark states reduce the duty
cycle, complicate the interpretation of intensity-based measurements, and prompt the elaboration of
specific algorithms for quantitative SPT [18].However, blinking can be
turned to an advantage in as much as it allows the identification of single NCs
and the detection of single-pair FRET (spFRET, Figure 2(a)), as shown on panel (b) between a QD565STV NC donor and an AlexaBiotin organic fluorophore acceptor (Yakovlev, Luccardini, and others' personal observations). Blinking of neighboring
NCs can also be used for ultrahigh resolution studies beyond the classical
resolution limit [19] and allows the emission of single particle to be
isolated from the crowd. NC detection is not restricted on detecting PL. Their electron density and
crystal structure provide sufficient contrast in transmission electron
microscopy (EM) [9, 20].
Their use in EM is an additional advantage over labelling samples with
conventional dyes that need to be photoconverted or require the addition of electron-dense
material to generate contrast on EM images. However, the contrast obtained with
NCs is lower than when using Au nanoparticles for immunolabelling.
Figure 2
Use of blinking to detect single-particle fluorescence resonance energy transfer (spFRET). (a) Schematic representation of the
donor/acceptor geometry consisting of a central QD565-ITK/STV donor (green) and
biotinylated Alexa594 acceptor (red). NCs were immobilized on
glass slides using a biotin-antibody linker. (b) Time-resolved traces of
PL intensity simultaneously observed in the donor (D565/20 nm) and FRET channel (D655/40 nm) upon donor 440-nm
excitation. The green-emitting NC donor transfers its energy to multiple
orange-red fluorescing acceptors. Donor bleed through and acceptor direct
excitation are negligible, and contribute less than 0.5% each to the total
signal, respectively. Note the concomitant blinking in both channels,
indicating no energy transfer when the quantum dot donor is in an OFF state, a
hallmark of spFRET [21]. cps = counts per
second.
3. NANOCRYSTAL SURFACE CHEMISTRY
Successful cell biological
applications of semiconductor NCs had to await the development of reliable
protocols for synthesizing water-soluble and colloidally stable nanoparticles.
To be of use in cellular imaging, NCs need to be first rendered water-soluble
and nonaggregating and then functionalized to be specifically targeted to a
molecule of interest. They should also be stable and ideally have a long shelf life
as well as to allow
for experiment series under reproducible conditions. The time needed to develop
potent solubilization and functionalization strategies justifies the time
elapsed after the first proposition of NCs as biological probes [3, 22] and
their wider use by the biological community which is only beginning. NCs are
synthesised in organic solvents and are subsequently coated with a hydrophobic
shell of surfactant trioctyl phospine oxide (TOPO) to maintain the particles
monodispersed in organic solvents. Their water solubility is obtained by
capping the NC surface with an additional hydrophilic coating layer. Among the
many solubilization strategies that have been designed the most efficient, in
terms of colloidal stability and biocompatibility, is at present the
amphiphilic polymer coating [23-25].
Particle aggregation can further be reduced through the addition of a polyethylene
glycol (PEG) layer, which also minimizes nonspecific interactions [20, 26, 27].
Taken together, the improvements in understanding NC surface chemistry and
hence controlling their colloidal properties have prompted an ever increasing
number of studies using colloidal semiconductor NCs as PL markers in cell
biological applications (see, e.g., [28, 29] for review).The easier accessibility of
extracellular
epitopes of cellular membrane
antigens readily motivates the increasing number of studies using NCs instead
of organic-fluorophore conjugated antibodies as extracellular markers in immunofluorescence [9, 30, 31].
Different linkers have been used for functionalizing NCs, including
streptavidin [32-34],
receptor ligands [35, 36], peptides
[37], as
well as secondary [38] or primary antibodies [39]. The popularity of NCs for studying molecular migration comes, at
least in part, from the fact that NCs often offer a viable compromise between
the desired stability and the tolerable degree of invasiveness. On the one
hand, they are clearly more stable than small organic fluorophores that in turn
exert less influence on the bound ligand. On the other hand, over tags offering
a comparable long-term stability, such as the much bigger (and hence invasive)
fluorescent nanobeads or light-scattering gold particles [40], through their smaller size, so that NCs are less prone to
reduce ligand mobility and access to the binding site.Despite their obvious
advantage for extracellular labelling, four main difficulties are encountered
when using NCs for intracellular labelling of cytoplasmic constituents in live cells. First, to deliver NCs into
the cell, the plasma membrane has to be made transiently permeable for these nanoscale
(but in a cellular context yet relatively large) objects, while maintaining the
cell intact and viable [41]. Second, as NCs are also unspecifically taken up, probably by a
process similar to pinocytosis, any specific uptake has to dominate over these
nonspecific uptake mechanisms to ensure a specific labelling. Pinocytosis
occurs in all types
of cells, leading to pinosomes which can be bigger than 1 m
(macropinocytosis). Because their size, macropinosomes provide an efficient
route for nonselective endocytosis of solute macromolecules, and hence NCs in
solution. Third, once the NCs have penetrated
the cell, they must stay monodispersed and reach their molecular target through
diffusion or transport. However, nanometric hard particles are frequently
recognized as exogenous objects and are engulfed in endo-/lysosomal
compartments. Finally, even in the case of a successful cytoplasmic loading,
the main obstacle remains the difficulty in addressing NCs to their specific
target sites and in removing the unbound NC fraction from the cytoplasm.
4. CROSSING THE PLASMA MEMBRANE
Whole-cell labelling has
been demonstrated with biocompatible, but nonfunctionalized (bare) NCs. The addition of NCs to the extracellular medium leads to their spontaneous uptake [28, 42]. Not only specialized
macrophages and fibroblasts but also many cells internalize both extracellular
particles and fluid via phagocytosis and pinocytosis, respectively. Virtually
all cells are able to take up NCs via endocytic mechanisms. This uptake leads
to endodomes that are much bigger than the NCs itself (macropynosomes > 1 m,
clathrin coated pits nm, caveolae nm, and clathrin- and
caveolin-independent endocytosi nm [43]). However, these tracks often lead to aggregations of
NCs crowded in intracellular compartments (recognized by the absence of blinking).
Thus, additional and more specific loading techniques are required for specific
NC loading.Microinjection is a simple
tool for loading monodispersed NCs into the cytoplasm [10, 36]. Dubertret and coworkers injected NCs into Xenopus laevis oocytes and traced the cell lineage
throughout embryonic development. Single-cell electroporation [44] potentially is another technique for loading charged NCs into individual
cells, but its efficiency critically depends on the size and charge of NCs (Luccardini
and Yakovlev unpublished observations). However, similar to patch clamping or microinjection,
it is time-consuming techniques;
and more efficient techniques are desirable when the loading of larger cell
populations is required.Bulk electroporation of cell suspensions allows the
parallel delivery of NCs into thousands of cells, but has been reported to go
along with NC aggregation [36, 45]. This technique probably traps NCs on the plasma membrane where they are
endocytoted during the time that is required for the cells to settle on the
cover glass before imaging (Luccardini and Yakovlev, personal observations). Thus, the osmotic lysis of pinosomes (Figure 3, upper panel)
provides a simple and convenient method to efficiently load monodispersed NCs
into many cells simultaneously, under identical
conditions. During loading, the cell morphology did not change
and plasma membrane integrity and cell viability were not affected through the
osmotic shock and inclusion of NCs (Figure 3, lower panel). This
technique enabled, for example, the loading of NCs to track single kinesin
motors in live cells [46]. Chemical methods to deliver NCs to the cytoplasm include the use of
cationic polymers [36, 45, 47] and cationic
lipids [10, 48]. After liposome formation, NCs penetrate the plasma
membrane, but accumulation in endosomal compartments is frequently observed [36, 39, 49]. Also,
liposome-loaded NCs have been found in late endosomes/lysosomes
[50], and in keeping with this observation, tend to concentrate in regions
close to the nucleus [10]. Overcoming NC
sequestration, encapsulation of NCs in a PEG-grafted polyethylenimine coat has
been reported to permit their escape from endosomal compartments [51]. Another possibility for NCs delivery into the cytosol is their conjugation to specific
peptide sequences [52, 53], similar to
what has been used for the delivery of magnetic nanoparticles [54]. Although this
is a particularly interesting and active area of research, and NC translocation
to the cytoplasm [55, 56] and specific
labelling of intracellular organelles such as mitochondria [36, 57] or the nucleus [36, 45] have been published, the true impact of these studies can only be
evaluated with a careful study of the three-dimensional (3-D) intracellular
localization of the NCs, for example, combining specific immunostaining and
quantitative 3D imaging [35, 58], and careful
colocalization analysis [5]. Finally, the conjugation of NCs to membrane-permeable toxins like
botulinum toxin should represent an attractive strategy to deliver NC into the
cytoplasm, although further work needs to confirm these initial observations.
Figure 3
Evaluation of cytoplasmic nanoparticle loading
in live cells by osmotic lysis of pinosomes. COS-7 cells were incubated in hypertonic solution
(10 minutes, 37°C, Invitrogen I-14402) for pinocytic loading of QD565ITK nanocrystals (NCs,
Quantum dot corporation). Shifting to hypotonic culture medium caused the
osmotic lysis of the internalized pinosomes and release of NCs into the
cytoplasm. (a) Bright-field image at × 100 magnification. Scale bar for (a) to (c):
4 m. (b)–(c) Epifluorescence images from a time-resolved image stack of the
same cell. Green circles identify individual NCs that intermittently changed
from ON to OFF state (blinking) between frame 250 (b) and 253 (c).
Cell viability following loading was tested using the trypan blue exclusion assay at low magnification, × 10. Osmotic shock without (d) and with 1 nM QD565ITK nanocrystals in the extracellular fluid (e) did not compromise cell viability. (f) In contrast, adding ethanol reliably killed cells as reported by the dark trypan blue labelling.
Scale bar for (d) to (f): 40 m.
In summary, while many different strategies of NC
loading have been explored and some of them to produce a monodispersed
cytoplasmic labelling at least in the cell types studied, the absence of
rigorous criteria for successful cytoplasmic loading and the lack of
appropriate controls along with the often uncritical and overoptimistic
interpretation of intracellular fluorescent puncta make it hard to be directly extrapolated from the
published literature on the own experiment. In principle, if NCs are localized
in the cytoplasm rather than sequestered in some intracellular compartment,
they should be evenly distributed in and randomly diffused throughout the accessible volume; in
contrast, many images rather show localized distributions and heterogeneous
clusters of different sizes
and brightnesses. A
definite proof needs SPT and the analysis of single molecule fluorescence.
Blinking and consistent diffusion coefficients will clarify if particles are monodispersed and trapped
or they can diffuse
freely. As yet, it seems safe to say that the uptake and internalization of
nanoscale particles into cells has not been completely understood and probably
varies both from cell type to cell type. Also, it depends on the surface
chemistry of the nanoparticles. Additionally, purification steps could play a
crucial role; for example, in determining the concentration of excess ligands in
solution.
5. REACHING SPECIFIC INTRACELLULAR TARGETS
Site-specific labelling of
intracellular proteins is far more difficult than extracellular target recognition,
since the cytoplasm constitutes a crowded molecular environment, containing a
plethora of proteins, nucleic acids, and other molecules. So as to achieve
specificity in intracellular targeting, tagging strategies rely on specific
target recognition (reviewed in [12, 59]). Another
requirement for LPO imaging is that the chemical bond linking the cytoplasmic
target and the label chosen for its detection is stable over the experiment
time.It is in response to this
need that the Tsien laboratory (University
of California, Calif, USA) introduced genetically encoded
fluorescent proteins in cell biology (reviewed in [60]). An
alternative strategy uses self-labelling protein tags. The introduction of a
small protein tag or of a unique combination of amino acids on the target
protein allows their interaction with a specific fluorophore-bearing substrate,
here an NC. Examples of self-labelling protein tags are biarsenical compounds [61, 62], SNAP
tag [63], and Halo tag [64]. These approaches are helpful for developing new NC
functionalization strategies for specific intracellular targeting.
6. WHOLE ANIMAL IMAGING, IN VIVO
Compared with applications
to subcellular imaging in cell biology, NC-based whole-animal imaging has
developed very fast [65]. Due to their long-wavelength emission, brightness, and long-term
photostability, NCs are ideal probes for sensitive in vivoimaging in
deep tissues of small animals or imaging superficial tissue layers of larger
species [11]. The possibility of synthesizing NCs emitting in the infrared
wavelengths minimizes scattering, optimizes depth penetration and allows discrimination
against collagen autofluorescence and thus should permit ultradeep imaging of
“optically thick” tissue [66, 67],
provided that cytotoxicity is not an issue (see Section 7).One of the first live-animal
applications of NCs was the selective labelling of tumor vasculature in mice by
using PEGylated NCs coated with specific peptidic sequences against vascular
markers. In 2002 Åkerman et al. [26] showed in histological staining that after intravenous NC injection,
functionalized NCs can be addressed to specific blood vessels. A high level of
PEG substitution on top of the functionalization of the NCs reduced their
uptake into the endothelial reticulum. One year later, Larson et al. were able
to image by multiphoton microscopy NCs through the skin of live mice, in
capillaries embedded 100 m in tissue [4]. Ballou
et al. demonstrated the importance of long-chain PEG (5 kDa) coating for
increasing the duration of NCs circulating in the blood flow of mice [20]. They were able to detect NCs by noninvasive whole body fluorescent
imaging, upto four months after injection. The same report also showed that NCs
deposit in liver, skin, and bone marrow in a surface-coating dependent manner
and that polymer- and PEG-coated (upto 3,400 Da MW) NCs are cleared from the
blood after injection. Gao et al. developed polymer-coated NCs functionalized
with a monoclonal antibody directed against prostate cancer cells as a
cell-specific marker [68]. After NC injection in mice, transplanted with humancancer
prostate cells, they succeeded in specifically detecting and imaging the tumor
site. However, as their NCs emitted in the visible spectrum, the authors used
spectral unmixing algorithms to detect the NC signal in the presence of
autofluorescence. Along these lines, Kim et al. [11] intradermally injected
near-infrared-emitting NCs in mice and pigs and imaged sentinel lymph nodes
(SNL) one cm deep in tissue. This work enables for the first time SNL mapping
and cancer surgery under image guidance. Metastatic tumor cell extravasations
were monitored in mice by intravenous injection of cells labelled with NC,
which were examined by fluorescence emission spectroscopy [47]. More recently, Stroh et al. combined NCs and multiphoton
intravital microscopy to distinguish in micetumor vessels from perivascular
cells and extracellular matrix [48]. With this approach, they also investigated the ability of NC-loaded
silica beads (100–500 nm diameter) to access the tumor and monitored the
trafficking of the precursor cells, a promising technique for cancer prevention
and treatment.So et al. designed recently
“self-illuminating” NC conjugates permitting in vivo imaging without an external light source; instead,
luciferase on the NC surface transfers its excitation to the NC core in a Bioluminescence
resonance energy transfer (BRET) assay [69]. Intramuscular or subcutaneous injection in mice of 5 pmol of
polymer-coated NCs conjugated to the Renilla
reniformis luciferase was enough to image a BRET emanating from 3 mm depth
tissue, after coelenterazine injection for activation. We note that this study
is one of the few applications that used NCs as acceptors rather than donors.
7. CYTOTOXICITY
As NCs are increasingly being used as biological
photoluminescent probes, in both acute cell assays and chronic, in the entire animal, in
vivo, it is important to evaluate if they represent a specific risk of
toxicity for the organism under study.Although probably not classically termed cytotoxicity in
a strict sense, one obvious problem resulting from the nanoscopic size of
nanoparticles is that NCs can directly affect the biological system under study
by impairing the mobility, interaction, binding, or other biological action of the
ligand molecule to which they are attached. Hence, any study using
NC-conjugated biomolecules must exclude the inhibition of the enzyme, receptor,
motor, or other by the NC.Concerns against the use of semiconductor NCs for cell
biological applications go well beyond arguments of steric hindrance. It is
well known that Cd2+ can be released from the CdSe core after
oxydative attack (corrosion) [70]. Bare CdSe NCs are particularly harmful in this regard [36, 71],
limiting their utility for direct-injection strategies. Additional shells (ZnS)
and capping (silanization) can reduce Cd2+ leakage, and further purification
steps can remove already released Cd2+ [71-73]. In
our hands, a supplementary purification step prior to loading NC reduces the
toxic action of NCs [74], as measured by a resazurin or cell adhesion assay (Figure 4). Nevertheless, it is important to
bear in mind that despite sporadic claims of nanoparticles being
indiscriminately harmless [57], there is a general consensus that NC are toxic and that their
toxicity depends on their concentration, precise chemical composition, the
particle size, colloidal stability, as well as solubilization and
functionalization groups. Also, CdSe particles are generally more toxic inside
the cell than extracellularly, in line with the known action of Cd2+ by inhibiting protein synthesis, carbohydrate metabolism and—with
time— by its accumulation in kidney and liver [75]. At
the same time, the undisputable cytotoxic action of Cd nanoparticles has not
precluded acute staining experiments of cells, because the concentration of NCs
can be always kept low enough to prevent immediate cytotoxic damage within the
experimental time window, but still high enough for enough fluorescence [4, 20, 39, 45, 47, 50]. However,
because of the ligand desorption over time, a simple ligand exchange
functionalization is not effective to durably prevent intracellular NC
degradation. Since as
much as NCs are intrinsically colloidally unstable and cytotoxic for cells [76], the specific kind of coating is essential for at least retarding
the cytotoxic effect [29, 36, 73]. PEG
coating can reduce the unspecific uptake of NCs, it reduces their toxic effect
for extracellular application at the same initial concentration [29, 71].
Figure 4
Experimental evaluation of cytotoxicity of
polymer-coated CdSe nanoparticles. Toxicity to NIH-3T3 fibroblasts of a
NC-containing solution was estimated after 48-hour application. Dose-response
curve for cell viability was measured with a Resazurin assay [74]. Reazurin is a nonfluorescent dye that is metabolized in
functional mitochondria and converted into resorufin which fluoresces red. Black
and grey curves show two experiments (n = 8 measurements each). Normalized survival R(c) after application of a Cd2+ concentrationc(Cd) was estimated from the change in
absorbance of the converted dye measured at 600 nm. Changes in R became significant at c (Cd) around 3–5 μM, whereby c (Cd)
refers to the concentration of Cd2+ on the surface of the CdSe
nanoparticles, which accounts for the different toxicity of different-size NCs.
This concentration of Cd2+ corresponds to a concentration of CdSe
nanoparticles of 50-70 nm. Similar data was obtained with a cell adhesion assay
[71] (not shown). In contrast
for free cobalt ions (Co2+), cytotoxic effects became significant at
around 50 M (data not shown).
For biomedical applications as well as chronic animal
experiments, the major healthcare concern of NC labelling is related to the
leakage of Cd2+ into the organism, even at low dose. Extracellular
application of CdSe particles already presents a cytotoxic risk becauseCd2+ does not only block Ca2+ ion channels (like Co2+ as well,
which is released from magnetic NCs) but also it permeates through the channel
and enters the cytoplasm. We note that the absence of a visible effect, often
based on the detection of cell morphology changes and cell viability assays does
not exclude a cumulative poisoning of the organism which first impairs the
metabolism of the cells, without being immediately noxious. Interestingly, a
similar debate has long haunted the evaluation of nonlinear photodamage caused
by two-photon fluorescence excitation, where the introduction of rigorous
physiologically relevant criteria based on microscopic observables like the
kinetics of Ca2+ transients [77, 78] has
ended the futile discussion.In conclusion, more work is needed to critically
evaluate the cytotoxicity of NCs, both upon short- and long-term exposure. To
better understand the deleterious action of different NCs on the organism under
study, standardized samples, experimental conditions, cells, and assays would
be a great leap forward and pave the ground for biomedical applications that
would additionally benefit from a tight collaboration with toxicologists.
8. CONCLUSIONS
In this review, we focus on nanocrystal applications in vivo, both in cell biology and
medical diagnostics, and on the potential toxicity of NCs for biological
imaging. The advances in understanding NC colloidal properties together with
the ability of developing stable surface chemistries has brought about a large
choice of functionalization strategies which now offer to biologists a
versatile tool kit for many applications that rely on fluorescence and electron
microscopy. The main advantages of NCs over conventional organic fluorophores
are the possibility to detect easily single molecules, mostly derived from
their superior brightness and the long-term photostability; the spectral
tunability and narrow-band emission; and, going along with these, the ease of
NC use in multicolour fluorescence. However, nanoparticles are not a cure-all.
Particularly Cd-based NCs are potentially cytotoxic, and the modulation of
their optical properties (e.g., their intrinsic fluorescence intermittency)
through their local chemical environment (see, e.g., [79]) needs to be considered in each application.
Authors: Igor L Medintz; Thomas Pons; Kimihiro Susumu; Kelly Boeneman; Allison Dennis; Dorothy Farrell; Jeffrey R Deschamps; Joseph S Melinger; Gang Bao; Hedi Mattoussi Journal: J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces Date: 2009-10-05 Impact factor: 4.126
Authors: Suzete A O Gomes; Cecilia Stahl Vieira; Diogo B Almeida; Jacenir R Santos-Mallet; Rubem F S Menna-Barreto; Carlos L Cesar; Denise Feder Journal: Sensors (Basel) Date: 2011-12-15 Impact factor: 3.576
Authors: Moritz Nazarenus; Qian Zhang; Mahmoud G Soliman; Pablo Del Pino; Beatriz Pelaz; Susana Carregal-Romero; Joanna Rejman; Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser; Martin J D Clift; Reinhard Zellner; G Ulrich Nienhaus; James B Delehanty; Igor L Medintz; Wolfgang J Parak Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol Date: 2014-09-09 Impact factor: 3.649