A novel cell transfection platform based on laser optoporation mediated by Au nanostar layers.
Timofey Evgenevich PylaevEkaterina VanzhaElena AvdeevaBoris Nikolayevich KhlebtsovNikolai G KhlebtsovPublished in: Journal of biophotonics (2018)
The recently developed laser-induced cell transfection mediated by Au nanoparticles is a promising alternative to the well-established lipid-based transfection or to electroporation. Optoporation is based on the laser plasmonic heating of nanoparticles located near the cell membrane. However, the uncontrollable cell damage from intense laser pulses and from random attachment of nanoparticles may be crucial for transfection. We present a novel plasmonic optoporation technique that uses Au nanostar layers immobilized in culture microplate wells. HeLa cells were grown directly on Au nanostar layers, after which they were subjected to continuous-wave 808 nm laser irradiation. An Au monolayer density ~15 μg/cm2 and an absorbed energy of about 15 to 30 J were found to be optimal for optoporation. Propidium iodide molecules were used as model penetrating agent. The transfection efficiency evaluated using fluorescence microscopy for HeLa cells transfected with pGFP under optimized optoporation conditions (95% ± 5%) was similar to the efficiency of TurboFect. The technique's efficiency (295 ± 10 relative light units, RLU), demonstrated by transfecting HeLa cells with the pCMV-GLuc 2 control plasmid, was greater than that obtained by transfection of HeLa cells with the TurboFect agent (220 ± 10 RLU). The cell viability in plasmonic optoporation (92% ± 7%), too, was greater than that in transfection with TurboFect (75% ± 7%).