| Literature DB >> 21794189 |
K Ted Thurn1, Ericmb Brown, Aiguo Wu, Stefan Vogt, Barry Lai, Jörg Maser, Tatjana Paunesku, Gayle E Woloschak.
Abstract
In the following review we discuss several types of nanoparticles (such as TiO2, quantum dots, and gold nanoparticles) and their impact on the ability to image biological components in fixed cells. The review also discusses factors influencing nanoparticle imaging and uptake in live cells in vitro. Due to their unique size-dependent properties nanoparticles offer numerous advantages over traditional dyes and proteins. For example, the photostability, narrow emission peak, and ability to rationally modify both the size and surface chemistry of Quantum Dots allow for simultaneous analyses of multiple targets within the same cell. On the other hand, the surface characteristics of nanometer sized TiO2allow efficient conjugation to nucleic acids which enables their retention in specific subcellular compartments. We discuss cellular uptake mechanisms for the internalization of nanoparticles and studies showing the influence of nanoparticle size and charge and the cell type targeted on nanoparticle uptake. The predominant nanoparticle uptake mechanisms include clathrin-dependent mechanisms, macropinocytosis, and phagocytosis.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 21794189 PMCID: PMC3246594 DOI: 10.1007/s11671-007-9081-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Variables affecting nanoparticle uptake and subcellular localization
| Nanoparticle | Cell type | Localization | Uptake mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 nm silica magnetic NP | A549 lung cancer | Endosomal | CME | Kim et al. [ |
| 24 and 43 nm Polystyrene(PST) | HeLa | 24 nm = perinuclear, 43 nm = lysosome | 24 nm = CME independent, 43 nm = CME | Lai et al. [ |
| 100 nm PLGA | Primary RHEC | Membrane bound, intracellular | Clathrin?, Caveolin independent | Qaddoumi et al. [ |
| 78 nm–1 μm Microspheres | RBC | Cytoplasm | Passive uptake? | Rothen-Rutishauser et al. [ |
| 40 nm–4.5 μm Microshperes | Dendritic | Cytoplasm and membrane bound | No experimental evidence | Foged et al. [ |
| PEG-PLA NP(+) and (−) charge | HeLa | Both types perinuclear | (+) NP = CME/macropinocytosis, (−) NP = CME/caveolin independent | Harush-Frenkel et al. [ |
| 100 nm MSN (uncoated, weak, moderate, and strong (+) charge) | hMSC and 3T3-L1 | No experimental evidence | hMSC: uncoated, weak, mod. (+) = CME, strong (+) unknown. 3T3-L1 = All CME | Chung et al. [ |
| 78 nm–1 μm PST Microsphere | Macrophage vs. RBC | Intracellular, not membrane bound | Macrophage: 1 μm = phagocytosis, .078–0.2 μm = actin-independent; RBC: all actin-independent | Geiser et al. [ |
| MSN strongly (+) | hMSC vs. 3T3-L1 | No experimental evidence | hMSC = CME-independent, 3T3-L1 = CME | Chung et al. [ |
| Folic acid-LDL NP | KB Cells (FR+) | Cytoplasm, not in nucleus | Receptor mediated endocytosis | Zheng et al. [ |
| PVA and vitamin E TPGS coated PLGA NPs | Caco-2 | Cytoplasm and nucleus | No experimental evidence | Win and Feng [ |
| Trastuzumab—HSA NP | BT-474 and SK-BR-3 | No experimental evidence | Receptor mediated endocytosis | Steinhauser et al. [ |
| Tat peptide conjugated Gold NP | hTERT-BJ1 fibroblast | Nucleus | No experimental evidence | de la Fuente and Berry [ |
NP = nanoparticle, PEG = poly(ethylene glycol), CME = clathrin-mediated endocytosis, PLGA = Poly(d,l-lactic-co-glycolic acid), (+) = positively charged, (−) = negatively charged, MSN = mesoporous silica nanoparticle, hMSC = human mesenchymal stem cell, RBC = red blood cell, FR+ = folate receptor positive, LDL = low density lipoprotein, PVA = polyvinyl alcohol, TPGS = d-alpha-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate, HSA = human serum albumin
Figure 1Factors affecting nanoparticle uptake. (A) Generally, smaller nanoparticles are internalized more efficiently than larger ones with similar surface characteristics. (B) Due to the negative charge of the cellular membrane, positively charged particles are preferentially taken up by living cells. (C) Cell-specific targeting by conjugating ligands for surface receptors to nanoparticles. (D) Rapid uptake and endosome bypassing can be achieved by conjugating protein transduction domains to the surface of the nanoparticle. (E) Conjugation of ODN was found to aid in specific subcellular localization based on the presence of complimentary cellular DNA. (F) Endosome escape has been reported to occur for nanoparticles whose surface is positively charged inside the low pH of late endosomes. Small nanoparticles have been reported to bypass degradation pathways better than larger particles of same chemical composition (see text for details)
Figure 2Combining X-ray fluorescence microscopy and fluorescent confocal microscopy for the imaging of intracellular nanoconjugates. MCF-7 cells were transfected with TiO2-DNA nanoconjugates complimentary to genomic DNA encoding r18S rRNA. The DNA was fluorescently labeled with TAMRA. After treatment, cells were washed, fixed, and stained with Hoechst dye. Then they were analyzed by fluorescent confocal microscopy for the localization of TAMRA. Next, the same cells were dehydrated in 100% ethanol and analyzed at the 2-ID-D Beamline at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratories for the presence of titanium. Black bar scale represents 10 μm for XFM (top left and middle), and the white bar 10 μm for fluorescent confocal microscopy (top right, bottom row)