| Literature DB >> 33809789 |
Maria V Efremova1,2, Silviu-Vasile Bodea1,2, Felix Sigmund1,2, Alevtina Semkina3,4, Gil G Westmeyer1,2, Maxim A Abakumov3,5.
Abstract
The study of growth and possible metastasis in animal models of tumors would benefit from reliable cell labels for noninvasive whole-organism imaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging. Genetically encoded cell-tracking reporters have the advantage that they are contrast-selective for viable cells with intact protein expression machinery. Besides, these reporters do not suffer from dilution during cell division. Encapsulins, which are bacterial protein nanocompartments, can serve as genetically controlled labels for multimodal detection of cells. Such nanocompartments can host various guest molecules inside their lumen. These include, for example, fluorescent proteins or enzymes with ferroxidase activity leading to biomineralization of iron oxide inside the encapsulin nanoshell. The aim of this work was to implement heterologous expression of encapsulin systems from Quasibacillus thermotolerans using the fluorescent reporter protein mScarlet-I and ferroxidase IMEF in the human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line HepG2. The successful expression of self-assembled encapsulin nanocompartments with functional cargo proteins was confirmed by fluorescence microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Also, coexpression of encapsulin nanoshells, ferroxidase cargo, and iron transporter led to an increase in T2-weighted contrast in magnetic resonance imaging of HepG2 cells. The results demonstrate that the encapsulin cargo system from Q. thermotolerans may be suitable for multimodal imaging of cancer cells and could contribute to further in vitro and in vivo studies.Entities:
Keywords: biogenic iron oxide nanoparticles; cell tracking; encapsulins; fluorescence; genetically controlled imaging reporters; magnetic resonance imaging; visualization of cancer cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809789 PMCID: PMC8002387 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13030397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Fluorescent microscopy images of HepG2 cells expressing QtEncFLAG nanoshell and DD-mScarlet-I-QtSig (QtEncFLAG + DD-mScarlet-I-QtSig) cargo protein (a–d) and DD-mScarlet-I-QtSig cargo protein alone (e–h). (a,c,e,g): Differential interference contrast microscopy images; (b,d,f,h): RFP-channel fluorescence images. The scale bars in (a,b,e,f) correspond to 200 μm; the scale bars in (c,d,g,h) correspond to 100 μm.
Figure 2TEM images of the HepG2 cells transiently expressing QtEncFLAG with QtIMEF cargo protein (QtIMEFP2AQtEncFLAG) and iron transporter Zip 14 cultivated in the medium supplemented with 2 mM ferrous ammonium sulfate (FAS) for 24 h. (a) Overview TEM image; the scale bar represents 500 nm. Close-up of exemplary regions in the nucleus ((b), red rectangle) and cytosol ((c), black rectangle)) with arrows pointing to the individual nanoparticles (NPs) containing iron; the scale bar represents 200 nm. The inset in (a) illustrates the size distribution of iron oxide cores inside the encapsulin shells.
Figure 3MRI relaxometry of the HepG2 cells transiently expressing the constructs as indicated in the figure and cultivated in the medium supplemented with 2 mM FAS for 24 h. (a) R2 and R2* values were computed from cell pellets comprising ~8 × 106 cells. (b) Fe masses in the same cell pellets determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). All numbers are plotted as mean values ± SD (n = 3). Statistical analysis was performed by unpaired t-test (*** corresponds to p-value < 0.001, * corresponds to p-value < 0.05).