4.7 Article

Structural and permeability sensitivity of cells to low intensity ultrasound: Infrared and fluorescence evidence in vitro

Journal

ULTRASONICS
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 1020-1028

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultras.2013.12.003

Keywords

Ultrasound; Membrane sonoporation; Cell uptake; FTIR spectroscopy; Fluorescence microscopy

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This work is focused on the in vitro study of the effects induced by medical ultrasound (US) in murine fibroblast cells (NIH-3T3) at a low-intensity of exposure (spatial peak temporal average intensity I-ta < 0.1 W cm(-2)). Conventional 1 MHz and 3 MHz US devices of therapeutic relevance were employed with varying intensity and exposure time parameters. In this framework, upon cells exposure to US, structural changes at the molecular level were evaluated by infrared spectroscopy; alterations in plasma membrane permeability were monitored in terms of uptake efficiency of small cell-impermeable model drug molecules, as measured by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. The results were related to the cell viability and combined with the statistical PCA analysis, confirming that NIH-3T3 cells are sensitive to therapeutic US, mainly at 1 MHz, with time-dependent increases in both efficiency of uptake, recovery of wild-type membrane permeability, and the size of molecules entering 3T3. On the contrary, the exposures from US equipment at 3 MHz show uptakes comparable with untreated samples. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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