4.8 Article

Transient Photoinactivation of Cell Membrane Protein Activity without Genetic Modification by Molecular Hyperthermia

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages 12487-12499

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b01993

Keywords

plasmonic nanoparticle; nanosecond laser; protein inactivation; G-protein-coupled receptor; blood-brain barrier

Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [RP160770, RP180846, RP190278]
  2. National Science Foundation [1631910]
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM133653, NS098826]
  4. American Heart Association [19CSLOI34770004]
  5. University of Texas at Dallas

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Precise manipulation of protein activity in living systems has broad applications in biomedical sciences. However, it is challenging to use light to manipulate protein activity in living systems without genetic modification. Here, we report a technique to optically switch off protein activity in living cells with high spatiotemporal resolution, referred to as molecular hyperthermia (MH). MH is based on the nanoscale-confined heating of plasmonic gold nanoparticles by short laser pulses to unfold and photoinactivate targeted proteins of interest. First, we show that protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2), a G-protein-coupled receptor and an important pathway that leads to pain sensitization, can be photoinactivated in situ by MH without compromising cell proliferation. PAR2 activity can be switched off in laser-targeted cells without affecting surrounding cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate the molecular specificity of MH by inactivating PAR2 while leaving other receptors intact. Second, we demonstrate that the photoinactivation of a tight junction protein in brain endothelial monolayers leads to a reversible blood-brain barrier opening in vitro. Lastly, the protein inactivation by MH is below the nanobubble generation threshold and thus is predominantly due to the nanoscale heating. MH is distinct from traditional hyperthermia (that induces global tissue heating) in both its time and length scales: nanoseconds versus seconds, nanometers versus millimeters. Our results demonstrate that MH enables selective and remote manipulation of protein activity and cellular behavior without genetic modification.

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