Back to Search
Start Over
Pulsed laser assisted high-throughput intracellular delivery in hanging drop based three dimensional cancer spheroids.
- Source :
-
The Analyst [Analyst] 2021 Aug 07; Vol. 146 (15), pp. 4756-4766. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jul 09. - Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Targeted intracellular delivery of biomolecules and therapeutic cargo enables the controlled manipulation of cellular processes. Laser-based optoporation has emerged as a versatile, non-invasive technique that employs light-based transient physical disruption of the cell membrane and achieves high transfection efficiency with low cell damage. Testing of the delivery efficiency of optoporation-based techniques has been conducted on single cells in monolayers, but its applicability in three-dimensional (3D) cell clusters/spheroids has not been explored. Cancer cells grown as 3D tumor spheroids are widely used in anti-cancer drug screening and can be potentially employed for testing delivery efficiency. Towards this goal, we demonstrated the optoporation-based high-throughput intracellular delivery of a model fluorescent cargo (propidium iodide, PI) within 3D SiHa human cervical cancer spheroids. To enable this technique, nano-spiked core-shell gold-coated polystyrene nanoparticles (ns-AuNPs) with a high surface-to-volume ratio were fabricated. ns-AuNPs exhibited high electric field enhancement and highly localized heating at an excitation wavelength of 680 nm. ns-AuNPs were co-incubated with cancer cells within hanging droplets to enable the rapid aggregation and assembly of spheroids. Nanosecond pulsed-laser excitation at the optimized values of laser fluence (45 mJ cm <superscript>-2</superscript> ), pulse frequency (10 Hz), laser exposure time (30 s), and ns-AuNP concentration (5 × 10 <superscript>10</superscript> particles per ml) resulted in the successful delivery of PI dye into cancer cells. This technique ensured high delivery efficiency (89.6 ± 2.8%) while maintaining high cellular viability (97.4 ± 0.4%), thereby validating the applicability of this technique for intracellular delivery. The optoporation-based strategy can enable high-throughput single cell manipulation, is scalable towards larger 3D tissue constructs, and may provide translational benefits for the delivery of anti-cancer therapeutics to tumors.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1364-5528
- Volume :
- 146
- Issue :
- 15
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- The Analyst
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 34240729
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1039/d0an02432e