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Nucleus and Mitochondria Targeting Theranostic Plasmonic Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy Nanoprobes as a Means for Revealing Molecular Stress Response Differences in Hyperthermia Cell Death between Cancerous and Normal Cells.

Guohua QiYing ZhangShu-Ping XuChuanping LiDandan WangHaijuan LiYongdong Jin
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
Metallic plasmonic nanoparticles have been intensively exploited as theranostic nanoprobes for plasmonic photothermal therapy (PPT) and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) applications. But the underlying molecular mechanisms associated with PPT-induced apoptosis between cancerous and normal cells have remained largely unknown or disputed. In this study, we designed an organelle-targeting theranostic plasmonic SERS nanoprobe (CDs-Ag/Au NS) composed of porous Ag/Au nanoshell (p-Ag/Au NSs) and carbon dots (CDs) for nucleus and mitochondria targeted PPT of cells. The differences in molecular stress response in the PPT-induced hyperthermia cell death between cancerous HeLa and normal L929 and H8 cells have been revealed by site-specific single-cell SERS detection. The contents of tryptophan (Trp), phenylalanine (Phe), and tyrosine (Tyr) in HeLa cells were found more evidently increased than L929 and H8 cells during the PPT-induced cell-death process. And from the mitochondria point of view, we found that the PPT-induced cell apoptosis for HeLa cells mainly stems from (or is regulated through) cellular thermal stress-responsive proteins, while for L929 and H8 cells it seems more related to DNA. Understanding molecular stress response difference of the PPT-induced cell apoptosis between cancerous and normal cells is helpful for diagnosis and treatment of cancer, and the method will open an avenue for single-cell studies.
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