4.8 Article

Free-Standing Kinked Silicon Nanowires for Probing Inter- and Intracellular Force Dynamics

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 5492-5498

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01963

Keywords

Silicon nanowire; force dynamics; endocytosis; bionano interface; cytoskeleton

Funding

  1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [AFOSR FA9550-14-1-0175]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF CAREER) [DMR-1254637]
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF MRSEC) [DMR-0820054]
  4. Searle Scholars Foundation
  5. University of Chicago

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Silicon nanowires (SiNWs) have emerged as a new class of materials with important applications in biology and medicine with current efforts having focused primarily on using substrate bound SiNW devices. However, developing devices capable of free-standing inter- and intracellular operation is an important next step in designing new synthetic cellular materials and tools for biophysical characterization. To demonstrate this, here we show that label free SiNSATs can be internalized in multiple cell lines, forming robust cytoskeletal interfaces, and when kinked can serve as free-standing inter- and intracellular force probes capable of continuous extended (>1 h) force monitoring. Our results show that intercellular interactions exhibit ratcheting like behavior with force peaks of similar to 69.6 pN/SiNW, while intracellular force peaks of similar to 116.9 pN/SiNW were recorded during smooth muscle contraction. To accomplish this, we have introduced a simple single-capture dark-field/phase contrast optical imaging modality, scatter enhanced phase contrast (SEPC), which enables the simultaneous visualization of both cellular components and inorganic nanostructures. This approach demonstrates that rationally designed devices capable of substrate-independent operation are achievable, providing a simple and scalable method for continuous inter- and intracellular force dynamics studies.

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