| Literature DB >> 25030447 |
Zhen Yang1, Liangzi Deng2, Yucheng Lan2, Xiaoliu Zhang3, Zhonghong Gao4, Ching-Wu Chu5, Dong Cai6, Zhifeng Ren6.
Abstract
Extraction of intracellular molecules is crucial to the study of cellular signal pathways. Disruption of the cellular membrane remains the established method to release intracellular contents, which inevitably terminates the time course of biological processes. Also, conventional laboratory extractions mostly use bulky materials that ignore the heterogeneity of each cell. In this work, we developed magnetized carbon nanotubes that can be sneaked into and out of cell bodies under a magnetic force. Using a testing model with overexpression of GFP, the nanotubes successfully transported the intracellular GFP out at the single-cell level. The confined nanoscale invasiveness did not change cell viability or proliferation. This study presents the proof of concept of a previously unidentified real-time and single-cell approach to investigate cellular biology, signal messengers, and therapeutic effects with nanomaterials.Entities:
Keywords: drug screening; real-time detection; single-cell method
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25030447 PMCID: PMC4121814 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1411802111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205