4.8 Article

Cytosolic Delivery of Nanolabels Prevents Their Asymmetric Inheritance and Enables Extended Quantitative in Vivo Cell Imaging

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 5975-5986

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b01411

Keywords

Cell labeling cytosolic delivery; nanopaiticle inheritance; vapor nanobubble photoporation; in vivo cell tracking; quantum dots

Funding

  1. Ghent University Special Research Fund (Centre for Nano- and Biophotonics)
  2. China Scholarship Council (CSC)
  3. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO Vlaanderen)
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [648124]
  5. foundation for Innovation by Science and Technology [IWT 140061]
  6. European Commission MC ITN Betatrain [289932]
  7. KU Leuven program financing IMIR [PF 2010/017]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [648124] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Long-term in vivo imaging of cells is crucial for the understanding of cellular fate in biological processes in cancer research, immunology, or in cell-based therapies such as beta cell transplantation, in type I diabetes or stem cell therapy. Traditionally, cell labeling with the desired contrast agent occurs ex vivo via spontaneous endocytosis, which is a variable and slow process that requires optimization for each particular label-cell type combination. Following endocytic uptake, the contrast agents mostly remain entrapped in the endolysosomal compartment, which leads to signal instability, cytotoxicity, and asymmetric inheritance of the labels upon cell division. Here, we demonstrate that these disadvantages can be circumvented by delivering contrast agents directly into the cytoplasm via vapor nanobubble photoporation. Compared to classic endocytic uptake, photoporation resulted in :50 and 3 times higher loading of fluorescent dextrans and quantum dots, respectively, with improved signal stability and reduced cytotoxicity: Most: interestingly, cytosolic delivery by iihotoporation prevented asymmetric inheritance of labels by daughter cells over subsequent cell' generations. Instead, unequal inheritance of endocytosed labels resulted in a dramatic increase in polydispersity of the amount of labels per cell with each cell division, hindering accurate quantification of cell numbers in vivo over time. The combined benefits of cell labeling by photoporation resulted in a marked improvement in long-term cell visibility in vivo where an insulin producing cell line (INS-1E cell line) labeled with fluorescent dextrans could be tracked for up to two months in Swiss nude mice compared to 2-Weeks for cells labeled by endocytosis.

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