Department of Chemistry, James Franck Institute and Institute for Biophysical Dynamics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Department of Chemistry, James Franck Institute and Institute for Biophysical Dynamics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.; The CAS Key Laboratory of Innate Immunity and Chronic Diseases, School of Life Sciences and Medical Center, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230027, PR China.
Sci Adv. 2016 Dec 16;2(12):e1601039. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1601039. eCollection 2016 Dec.
The ability to seamlessly merge electronic devices with biological systems at the cellular length scale is an exciting prospect for exploring new fundamental cell biology and in designing next-generation therapeutic devices. Semiconductor nanowires are well suited for achieving this goal because of their intrinsic size and wide range of possible configurations. However, current studies have focused primarily on delivering substrate-bound nanowire devices through mechanical abrasion or electroporation, with these bulkier substrates negating many of the inherent benefits of using nanoscale materials. To improve on this, an important next step is learning how to distribute these devices in a drug-like fashion, where cells can naturally uptake and incorporate these electronic components, allowing for truly noninvasive device integration. We show that silicon nanowires (SiNWs) can potentially be used as such a system, demonstrating that label-free SiNWs can be internalized in multiple cell lines (96% uptake rate), undergoing an active "burst-like" transport process. Our results show that, rather than through exogenous manipulation, SiNWs are internalized primarily through an endogenous phagocytosis pathway, allowing cellular integration of these materials. To study this behavior, we have developed a robust set of methodologies for quantitatively examining high-aspect ratio nanowire-cell interactions in a time-dependent manner on both single-cell and ensemble levels. This approach represents one of the first dynamic studies of semiconductor nanowire internalization and offers valuable insight into designing devices for biomolecule delivery, intracellular sensing, and photoresponsive therapies.
能够在细胞尺度上无缝地将电子设备与生物系统融合,这是探索新的基础细胞生物学和设计下一代治疗设备的一个令人兴奋的前景。半导体纳米线非常适合实现这一目标,因为它们具有内在的尺寸和广泛的可能配置。然而,目前的研究主要集中在通过机械磨损或电穿孔来输送基底结合的纳米线设备上,这些更笨重的基底否定了使用纳米级材料的许多固有优势。为了改进这一点,一个重要的下一步是学习如何以类似药物的方式分布这些设备,使细胞可以自然吸收和整合这些电子元件,从而实现真正的非侵入性设备集成。我们表明,硅纳米线(SiNWs)可以作为这样的系统,证明无标记的 SiNWs 可以在多种细胞系中被内化(96%的摄取率),经历一种活跃的“爆发样”运输过程。我们的结果表明,SiNWs 主要通过内吞作用途径被内化,而不是通过外源性操作,从而允许这些材料的细胞整合。为了研究这种行为,我们开发了一套强大的方法,用于在单细胞和整体水平上以时间依赖性方式定量研究高纵横比纳米线-细胞相互作用。这种方法代表了对半导体纳米线内化的首次动态研究之一,为设计用于生物分子输送、细胞内传感和光响应治疗的设备提供了有价值的见解。