Near-infrared light remotely up-regulate autophagy with spatiotemporal precision via upconversion optogenetic nanosystem

Biomaterials. 2019 Apr:199:22-31. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.01.042. Epub 2019 Feb 1.

Abstract

In vivo noninvasively manipulating biological functions by the mediation of biosafe near infrared (NIR) light is becoming increasingly popular. For these applications, upconversion rare-earth nanomaterial holds great promise as a novel photonic element, and has been widely adopted in optogenetics. In this article, an upconversion optogenetic nanosystem that was promised to achieve autophagy up-regulation with spatiotemporal precision was designed. The implantable, wireless, recyclable, less-invasive and biocompatible system worked via two separated parts: blue light-receptor optogenetics-autophagy upregulation plasmids, for protein import; upconversion rods-encapsulated flexible capsule (UCRs-capsule), for converting tissue-penetrative NIR light into local visible blue light. Results validated that this system could achieve up-regulation of autophagy in vitro (in both HeLa and 293T cell lines) and remotely penetrate tissue (∼3.5 mm) in vivo. Since autophagy serves at a central position in intracellular signalling pathways, which is correlative with diverse pathologies, we expect that this method could establish an upconversion material-based autophagy up-regulation strategy for fundamental and clinical applications.

Keywords: Autophagy; Near-infrared (NIR) light; Optogenetics; Protein-protein interaction (PPI); Upconversion materials.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Autophagy / radiation effects*
  • Humans
  • Infrared Rays*
  • Nanoparticles / chemistry*
  • Optogenetics*
  • Protein Interaction Mapping
  • Up-Regulation / radiation effects*