Options
Pulsed laser assisted high-Throughput intracellular delivery in hanging drop based three dimensional cancer spheroids
Date Issued
07-08-2021
Author(s)
Gupta, Pallavi
Kar, Srabani
Kumar, Ashish
Tseng, Fan Gang
Indian Institute of Technology, Madras
Indian Institute of Technology, Madras
Indian Institute of Technology, Madras
Abstract
Targeted intracellular delivery of biomolecules and therapeutic cargo enables the controlled manipulation of cellular processes. Laser-based optoporation has emerged as a versatile, non-invasive technique that employs light-based transient physical disruption of the cell membrane and achieves high transfection efficiency with low cell damage. Testing of the delivery efficiency of optoporation-based techniques has been conducted on single cells in monolayers, but its applicability in three-dimensional (3D) cell clusters/spheroids has not been explored. Cancer cells grown as 3D tumor spheroids are widely used in anti-cancer drug screening and can be potentially employed for testing delivery efficiency. Towards this goal, we demonstrated the optoporation-based high-Throughput intracellular delivery of a model fluorescent cargo (propidium iodide, PI) within 3D SiHa human cervical cancer spheroids. To enable this technique, nano-spiked core-shell gold-coated polystyrene nanoparticles (ns-AuNPs) with a high surface-To-volume ratio were fabricated. ns-AuNPs exhibited high electric field enhancement and highly localized heating at an excitation wavelength of 680 nm. ns-AuNPs were co-incubated with cancer cells within hanging droplets to enable the rapid aggregation and assembly of spheroids. Nanosecond pulsed-laser excitation at the optimized values of laser fluence (45 mJ cm-2), pulse frequency (10 Hz), laser exposure time (30 s), and ns-AuNP concentration (5 × 1010 particles per ml) resulted in the successful delivery of PI dye into cancer cells. This technique ensured high delivery efficiency (89.6 2.8%) while maintaining high cellular viability (97.4 0.4%), thereby validating the applicability of this technique for intracellular delivery. The optoporation-based strategy can enable high-Throughput single cell manipulation, is scalable towards larger 3D tissue constructs, and may provide translational benefits for the delivery of anti-cancer therapeutics to tumors. This journal is
Volume
146