Enhanced Intracellular Delivery and Cell Harvest Using a Candle Soot-Based Photothermal Platform with Dual-Stimulus Responsiveness

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2023 Aug 30;15(34):40153-40162. doi: 10.1021/acsami.3c02738. Epub 2023 Aug 17.

Abstract

Intracellular delivery of bioactive macromolecules and functional materials plays a crucial role in fundamental biological research and clinical applications. Nondestructive and efficient harvesting of engineered cells is also required for some specific applications. In this work, we develop a multifunctional platform based on candle soot modified with copolymer brushes containing temperature-responsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) and sugar-responsive phenylboronic acid (PBA) components. This platform possesses a high cell adhesion capacity due to the inherent hierarchical structure of candle soot and the formation of boronate ester bonds between the PBA groups and glycoproteins on the cell membrane. Under the irradiation of a near-infrared laser, the excellent light-to-heat conversion ability of candle soot enables the highly efficient delivery of macromolecules into diverse cells (including hard-to-transfect cells) attached to the surface via a photothermal-poration mechanism. Owing to the temperature-responsive properties of PNIPAAm and the sugar-responsive properties of PBA, the engineered cells could be harvested nondestructively from the platform by a mild treatment using a cold fructose solution. A proof-of-concept experiment demonstrates that fibroblasts attached to the surface could be transfected by a functional plasmid encoding basic fibroblast growth factor and then harvested efficiently and recultured with improved proliferation and migration ability. The whole delivery-harvesting process required less than 1 h, allowing the cells to be engineered without compromising their viability. This platform thus provides a widely applicable method for both the intracellular delivery of diverse macromolecules efficiently as well as harvesting engineered cells simply and safely, holding great potential for biomedical applications.

Keywords: candle soot; cell harvest; intracellular delivery; photothermal poration; sugar-responsive; temperature-responsive.

MeSH terms

  • Boronic Acids*
  • Soot*
  • Sugars

Substances

  • Soot
  • benzeneboronic acid
  • Boronic Acids
  • Sugars

Supplementary concepts

  • Nakajo syndrome