Science and Research

Analysis of poration-induced changes in cells from laser-activated plasmonic substrates

Laser-exposed plasmonic substrates permeabilize the plasma membrane of cells when in close contact to deliver cell-impermeable cargo. While studies have determined the cargo delivery efficiency and viability of laser-exposed plasmonic substrates, morphological changes in a cell have not been quantified. We porated myoblast C2C12 cells on a plasmonic pyramid array using a 532-nm laser with 850-ps pulse length and time-lapse fluorescence imaging to quantify cellular changes. We obtain a poration efficiency of 80%, viability of 90%, and a pore radius of 20 nm. We quantified area changes in the plasma membrane attached to the substrate (10% decrease), nucleus (5 - 10% decrease), and cytoplasm (5 - 10% decrease) over 1 h after laser treatment. Cytoskeleton fibers show a change of 50% in the alignment, or coherency, of fibers, which stabilizes after 10 mins. We investigate structural and morphological changes due to the poration process to enable the safe development of this technique for therapeutic applications.

  • Saklayen, N.; Kalies, S.; Madrid, M.; Nuzzo, V.; Huber, M.; Shen, W.; Sinanan-Singh, J.; Heinemann, D.; Heisterkamp, A.; Mazur, E.

Keywords

  • (000.1430) Biology and medicine
  • (190.4870) Photothermal effects
  • (350.4855) Optical tweezers or optical manipulation
Publication details
DOI: 10.1364/boe.8.004756
Journal: Biomedical optics express
Pages: 4756-4771 
Number: 10
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: PLI
Partner / Member: LUH
Access-Number: 29082100

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