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Long-Term Monitoring of the Physicochemical Properties of Silica-Based Nanoparticles on the Rate of Endocytosis and Exocytosis and Consequences of Cell Division

Authors :
George R. Beck
Shin-Woo Ha
M. Neale Weitzmann
Corinne E. Camalier
Jin-Kyu Lee
Source :
Soft Materials. 11:195-203
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2013.

Abstract

Nanomaterials are diverse in size, shape and charge and these differences likely alter their physicochemical properties in biological systems. We have investigated how these properties alter the initial and long-term dynamics of endocytosis, cell viability, cell division, exocytosis, and interaction with a collagen extracellular matrix using silica-based fluorescent nanoparticles and the murine pre-osteoblast cell line, MC3T3-E1. Three surface modified nanoparticles were analyzed: positively charged (PTMA), negatively charged (OH), and neutrally charged polyethylene glycol (PEG). Positively charged PTMA-modified nanoparticles demonstrated the most rapid uptake, within 2 hours, while PEG modified and negatively charged OH nanoparticles demonstrated slower uptake. Cell viability was >80% irrespective of nanoparticle surface charge suggesting a general lack of toxicity. Long-term monitoring of fluorescent intensity revealed that nanoparticles were passed to daughter cells during mitotic cell division with a corresponding decrease in fluorescent intensity. These data suggest that irrespective of surface charge silica nanoparticles have the potential to internalize into osteoblasts, albeit with different kinetics. Furthermore, long lived nanoparticles have the potential to be transferred to daughter cells during mitosis and can be maintained for weeks intracellularly or within a collagen matrix without toxicity and limited exocytosis.

Details

ISSN :
15394468 and 1539445X
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Soft Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6d286304b6ccedfa9feb271a055f302