| Literature DB >> 31579070 |
Elvira Rozhina1, Ilnur Ishmukhametov1, Svetlana Batasheva1, Farida Akhatova1, Rawil Fakhrullin1.
Abstract
Cell surface engineering, as a practical manifestation of nanoarchitectonics, is a powerful tool to modify and enhance properties of live cells. In turn, cells may serve as sacrificial templates to fabricate cell-mimicking materials. Herein we report a facile method to produce cell-recognising silica imprints capable of the selective detection of human cells. We used HeLa cells to template silica inorganic shells doped with halloysite clay nanotubes. The shells were destroyed by sonication resulting in the formation of polydisperse hybrid imprints that were used to recognise HeLa cells in liquid media supplemented with yeast. We believe that methodology reported here will find applications in biomedical and clinical research.Entities:
Keywords: cell surface engineering; cell-recognising imprints; halloysite nanotubes; nanoarchtectonics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31579070 PMCID: PMC6753675 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.10.176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Production of silica/halloysite cell-mimicking imprints and recognition of human cells by the imprints in HeLa/yeast cells mixture. The imprints were obtained by destruction of inorganic shells deposited on live cells.
Figure 2(A) optical/fluorescence microscopy image of live HeLa cells coated with halloysite-doped silica shells (nuclei are stained with DAPI); (B, C) dark-field microscopy images of live HeLa cells coated with halloysite-doped silica shells; scanning electron microscopy images of (D) intact HeLa cells, (E) HeLa cells coated with pure silica shells and (F) HeLa cells coated with halloysite-doped silica shells. Red arrows indicate halloysite nanotubes.
Figure 3Optical microscopy images demonstrating the cultivation for 24 h of (A, B) substrate-attached intact HeLa cells and (C, D) HeLa cells coated with halloysite-doped silica shells; flow cytometry monitoring of cell division for three days of CFSE-stained (E) intact HeLa cells, (F) silica-coated HeLa cells and (G) HeLa cells coated with halloysite-doped silica shells.
Figure 4Atomic force microscopy (PeakForce Tapping mode) images of inorganic silica/halloysite imprints templated on HeLa cells: (A) topography image, (B) non-specific adhesion map; (C) scanning electron microscopy image of inorganic silica/halloysite imprints templated on HeLa cells; (D) EDX spectrum taken from the sample shown in (C), demonstrating the typical silica and halloysite elemental distribution; (E) optical and (F) confocal microscopy images demonstrating the recognition of HeLa cells with cell-templated imprints (cell nuclei stained with DAPI, imprints with rhodamine B in panel (F); (G) optical microscopy image of selective recognition of HeLa cells by the imprint in a mixture of human cells with yeast cells.