4.8 Article

Intracellular Photothermal Delivery for Suspension Cells Using Sharp Nanoscale Tips in Microwells

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 10835-10844

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b06025

Keywords

suspension cells; photothermal delivery; self-aligned cell seeding; intracellular delivery; microwell

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM114188, R01GM073981, R01CA185189, R21CA227480, P30CA016042, T32CA009120, GM55052, 5T34GM008563, TR01DA045550]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research grant [AFOSR FA9550-15-1-0406]
  3. NSF [CBET 1404080]
  4. AHA Award [18POST34080342]

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Efficient intracellular delivery of biomolecules into cells that grow in suspension is of great interest for biomedical research, such as for applications in cancer immunotherapy. Although tremendous effort has been expended, it remains challenging for existing transfer platforms to deliver materials efficiently into suspension cells. Here, we demonstrate a high-efficiency photothermal delivery approach for suspension cells using sharp nanoscale metal-coated tips positioned at the edge of microwells, which provide controllable membrane disruption for each cell in an array. Self-aligned microfabrication generates a uniform microwell array with three-dimensional nanoscale metallic sharp tip structures. Suspension cells selfposition by gravity within each microwell in direct contact with eight sharp tips, where laser-induced cavitation bubbles generate transient pores in the cell membrane to facilitate intracellular delivery of extracellular cargo. A range of cargo sizes were tested on this platform using Ramos suspension B cells with an efficiency of >84% for Calcein green (0.6 kDa) and >45% for FITC-dextran (2000 kDa), with retained viability of >96% and a throughput of >100 000 cells delivered per minute. The bacterial enzyme beta-lactamase (29 kDa) was delivered into Ramos B cells and retained its biological activity, whereas a green fluorescence protein expression plasmid was delivered into Ramos B cells with a transfection efficiency of >58%, and a viability of >89% achieved.

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