A potent, minimally invasive and simple strategy of enhancing intracellular targeted delivery of Tat peptide-conjugated quantum dots: organic solvent-based permeation enhancer. (10th October 2018)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- A potent, minimally invasive and simple strategy of enhancing intracellular targeted delivery of Tat peptide-conjugated quantum dots: organic solvent-based permeation enhancer. (10th October 2018)
- Main Title:
- A potent, minimally invasive and simple strategy of enhancing intracellular targeted delivery of Tat peptide-conjugated quantum dots: organic solvent-based permeation enhancer
- Authors:
- Yong, Xueqing
Yang, Xuan
Emory, Steven R.
Wang, Jun
Dai, Jie
Yu, Xiaoya
Mei, Ling
Xie, Jinbing
Ruan, Gang - Abstract:
- Abstract : Organic solvent in low percentage offers a great way to enhance vesicle escape and intracellular targeted delivery of nanomaterials. Abstract : Targeted delivery of nanomaterials to specific intracellular locations is essential for the development of many nanomaterials-based biological applications. Thus far the targeting performance has been limited due to various intracellular transport barriers, especially intracellular vesicle trapping. Here we report the application of permeation enhancers based on organic solvents in small percentage to enhance the intracellular targeted delivery of nanomaterials. Previously permeation enhancers based on organic solvents and ionic liquids have been used in overcoming biological transport barriers at tissue, organ, and cellular levels, but this strategy has so far rarely been examined for its potential in facilitating transport of nanometer-scale entities across intracellular barriers, particularly intracellular vesicle trapping. Using the cell nucleus as a model intracellular target and Tat peptide-conjugated quantum dots (QDs-Tat) as a model nanomaterial-based probe, we demonstrate that a small percentage ( e.g. 1%) of organic solvent greatly enhances nucleus targeting specificity as well as increasing endocytosis-based cellular uptake of QDs. We combine vesicle colocalization (DiO dye staining), vesicle integrity (calcein dye release), and single-particle studies (pair-correlation function microscopy) to investigate theAbstract : Organic solvent in low percentage offers a great way to enhance vesicle escape and intracellular targeted delivery of nanomaterials. Abstract : Targeted delivery of nanomaterials to specific intracellular locations is essential for the development of many nanomaterials-based biological applications. Thus far the targeting performance has been limited due to various intracellular transport barriers, especially intracellular vesicle trapping. Here we report the application of permeation enhancers based on organic solvents in small percentage to enhance the intracellular targeted delivery of nanomaterials. Previously permeation enhancers based on organic solvents and ionic liquids have been used in overcoming biological transport barriers at tissue, organ, and cellular levels, but this strategy has so far rarely been examined for its potential in facilitating transport of nanometer-scale entities across intracellular barriers, particularly intracellular vesicle trapping. Using the cell nucleus as a model intracellular target and Tat peptide-conjugated quantum dots (QDs-Tat) as a model nanomaterial-based probe, we demonstrate that a small percentage ( e.g. 1%) of organic solvent greatly enhances nucleus targeting specificity as well as increasing endocytosis-based cellular uptake of QDs. We combine vesicle colocalization (DiO dye staining), vesicle integrity (calcein dye release), and single-particle studies (pair-correlation function microscopy) to investigate the process of organic solvent-enhanced vesicle escape of QDs-Tat. The organic solvent based vesicle escape-enhancing approach is found to be not only very effective but minimally invasive, resulting in high vesicle escape efficiency with no significant disruption to the membrane integrity of either intracellular vesicles or cells. This approach drastically outperforms the commonly used vesicle escape-enhancing agent ( i.e., chloroquine, whose enhancement effect is based on disrupting vesicle integrity) in both potency and minimal invasiveness. Finally, we apply organic solvent-based targeting enhancement to improve the intracellular delivery of the anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX). … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Biomaterials science. Volume 6:Number 11(2018)
- Journal:
- Biomaterials science
- Issue:
- Volume 6:Number 11(2018)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 6, Issue 11 (2018)
- Year:
- 2018
- Volume:
- 6
- Issue:
- 11
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2018-0006-0011-0000
- Page Start:
- 3085
- Page End:
- 3095
- Publication Date:
- 2018-10-10
- Subjects:
- Biomedical materials -- Periodicals
610.28 - Journal URLs:
- http://pubs.rsc.org/en/journals/journalissues/bm ↗
http://www.rsc.org/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1039/c8bm00928g ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2047-4830
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 2087.724000
British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library STI - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 8371.xml