Massive Intracellular Biodegradation of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Evidenced Magnetically at Single-Endosome and Tissue Levels

ACS Nano. 2016 Aug 23;10(8):7627-38. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.6b02876. Epub 2016 Jul 22.

Abstract

Quantitative studies of the long-term fate of iron oxide nanoparticles inside cells, a prerequisite for regenerative medicine applications, are hampered by the lack of suitable biological tissue models and analytical methods. Here, we propose stem-cell spheroids as a tissue model to track intracellular magnetic nanoparticle transformations during long-term tissue maturation. We show that global spheroid magnetism can serve as a fingerprint of the degradation process, and we evidence a near-complete nanoparticle degradation over a month of tissue maturation, as confirmed by electron microscopy. Remarkably, the same massive degradation was measured at the endosome level by single-endosome nanomagnetophoretic tracking in cell-free endosomal extract. Interestingly, this spectacular nanoparticle breakdown barely affected iron homeostasis: only the genes coding for ferritin light chain (iron loading) and ferroportin (iron export) were up-regulated 2-fold by the degradation process. Besides, the magnetic and tissular tools developed here allow screening of the biostability of magnetic nanomaterials, as demonstrated with iron oxide nanocubes and nanodimers. Hence, stem-cell spheroids and purified endosomes are suitable models needed to monitor nanoparticle degradation in conjunction with magnetic, chemical, and biological characterizations at the cellular scale, quantitatively, in the long term, in situ, and in real time.

Keywords: biodegradation; endosomes; iron metabolism; iron oxide nanoparticles; nanomagnetism; spheroids; stem cells.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Endosomes*
  • Ferric Compounds*
  • Magnetics
  • Magnetite Nanoparticles*
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Nanoparticles
  • Spheroids, Cellular

Substances

  • Ferric Compounds
  • Magnetite Nanoparticles
  • ferric oxide