Issue 41, 2021

Sources of variability in nanoparticle uptake by cells

Abstract

Understanding how nano-sized objects are taken up by cells is important for applications within medicine (nanomedicine), as well as to avoid unforeseen hazard due to nanotechnology (nanosafety). Even within the same cell population, one typically observes a large cell-to-cell variability in nanoparticle uptake, raising the question of the underlying cause(s). Here we investigate cell-to-cell variability in polystyrene nanoparticle uptake by HeLa cells, with generalisations of the results to silica nanoparticles and liposomes, as well as to A549 and primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells. We show that uptake of nanoparticles is correlated with cell size within a cell population, thereby reproducing and generalising previous reports highlighting the role of cell size in nanoparticle uptake. By repeatedly isolating (using fluorescence-activated cell sorting) the cells that take up the most and least nanoparticles, respectively, and performing RNA sequencing on these cells separately, we examine the underlying gene expression that contributes to high and low polystyrene nanoparticle accumulation in HeLa cells. We can thereby show that cell size is not the sole driver of cell-to-cell variability, but that other cellular characteristics also play a role. In contrast to cell size, these characteristics are more specific to the object (nanoparticle or protein) being taken up, but are nevertheless highly heterogeneous, complicating their detailed identification. Overall, our results highlight the complexity underlying the cellular features that determine nanoparticle uptake propensity.

Graphical abstract: Sources of variability in nanoparticle uptake by cells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jul 2021
Accepted
28 Sep 2021
First published
05 Oct 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale, 2021,13, 17530-17546

Sources of variability in nanoparticle uptake by cells

C. Åberg, V. Piattelli, D. Montizaan and A. Salvati, Nanoscale, 2021, 13, 17530 DOI: 10.1039/D1NR04690J

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