Issue 16, 2012

Seeing the electroporative uptake of cell-membrane impermeable fluorescent molecules and nanoparticles

Abstract

This paper presents direct visualization of uptake directionality for cell-membrane impermeant fluorescent molecules and fluorescence-doped nanoparticles at a single-cell level during electroporation. To observe directly the uptake direction, we used microchannel-type electroporation that can generate a relatively symmetric and uniform electric field. For all the image frames during electroporation, fluorescence intensities that occurred at cell membranes in both uptake directions toward the electrodes have been sequentially recorded and quantitatively analyzed pixel by pixel. In our experiments, we found that fluorescent molecules, even not labeled to target biomolecules, had their own uptake direction with different intensities. It is also observed that the uptake intensity toward the cell membrane had a maximal value at a certain electric voltage, not at the highest value of voltages applied. The results also imply that the uptake direction of fluorescence-doped nanoparticles can be determined by a net surface charge of uptake materials and sizes in the electroporative environments. In summary, we performed a quantitative screening and direct visualization of uptake directionality for a set of fluorescent molecules and fluorescence-doped nanoparticles using electric-pulsation. Taking a closer look at the uptake direction of exogenous materials will help researchers to understand an unknown uptake phenomenon in which way foreign materials are inclined to move, and furthermore to design functional nanoparticles for electroporative gene delivery.

Graphical abstract: Seeing the electroporative uptake of cell-membrane impermeable fluorescent molecules and nanoparticles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Mar 2012
Accepted
17 May 2012
First published
21 May 2012

Nanoscale, 2012,4, 5051-5058

Seeing the electroporative uptake of cell-membrane impermeable fluorescent molecules and nanoparticles

K. Kim, J. A. Kim, S. Lee and W. G. Lee, Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 5051 DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30578J

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