4.8 Article

Structured Liquid Droplets as Chemical Sensors that Function Inside Living Cells

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 36, Pages 42502-42512

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c12667

Keywords

liquid crystals; polymers; microcapsules; cells; stimuli-responsive materials

Funding

  1. NSF [DMR-1720415]
  2. Office of Naval Research [N00014-14-1-0791]
  3. Wisconsin MRSEC
  4. Graduate Research Scholars (GERS) program at UW-Madison

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This study demonstrates the use of micrometer-scale droplets of liquid crystals as chemical sensors inside living mammalian cells to detect toxins in extracellular environments. The droplets are stable and respond to low concentrations of toxic substances, suggesting a potential new method for sensitive and selective detection of chemical agents outside cells. The activation of droplets involves the transport and co-adsorption of toxins and cell components to the surfaces of internalized droplets, providing a foundation for future applications in sensing and reporting on biochemical processes inside cells.
We report that micrometer-scale droplets of thermotropic liquid crystals (LCs) can be positioned inside living mammalian cells and deployed as chemical sensors to report the presence of toxins in extracellular environments. Our approach exploits droplets of LC enclosed in semi-permeable polymer capsules that enable internalization by cells. The LC droplets are stable in intracellular environments, but undergo optical changes upon exposure of cells to low, sub-lethal concentrations of toxic amphiphiles. Remarkably, LC droplets in intracellular environments respond to extracellular analytes that do not generate an LC response in the absence of cellular internalization. They also do not respond to other chemical stimuli or processes associated with cell growth or manipulation in culture. Our results suggest that droplet activation involves the transport and co-adsorption of amphiphilic toxins and other lipophilic cell components to the surfaces of internalized droplets. This work provides fundamentally new designs of biotic-abiotic systems that can report sensitively and selectively on the presence of select chemical agents outside cells and provides a foundation for the design of structured liquid droplets that can sense and report on other biochemical or metabolic processes inside cells.

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