volume 142 pages 308-319

Multiphoton imaging of melanoma 3D models with plasmonic nanocapsules

Paula Zamora Perez 1
Marcos Sanles-Sobrido 1
Muriel Rovira Esteva 1
José Conesa 2
Vladimir Mulens Arias 1
D. Jaque 3, 4
Pilar Rivera-Gil 5
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-04-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR2.007
CiteScore17.8
Impact factor9.6
ISSN17427061, 18787568
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
General Medicine
Biotechnology
Biomaterials
Biomedical Engineering
Abstract
We report the synthesis of plasmonic nanocapsules and the cellular responses they induce in 3D melanoma models for their perspective use as a photothermal therapeutic agent. The wall of the nanocapsules is composed of polyelectrolytes. The inner part is functionalized with discrete gold nanoislands. The cavity of the nanocapsules contains a fluorescent payload to show their ability for loading a cargo. The nanocapsules exhibit simultaneous two-photon luminescent, fluorescent properties and X-ray contrasting ability. The average fluorescence lifetime (τ) of the nanocapsules measured with FLIM (0.3 ns) is maintained regardless of the intracellular environment, thus proving their abilities for bioimaging of models such as 3D spheroids with a complex architecture. Their multimodal imaging properties are exploited for the first time to study tumorspheres cellular responses exposed to the nanocapsules. Specifically, we studied cellular uptake, toxicity, intracellular fate, generation of reactive oxygen species, and effect on the levels of hypoxia by using multi-photon and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Because of the high X-ray attenuation and atomic number of the gold nanostructure, we imaged the nanocapsule-cell interactions without processing the sample. We confirmed maintenance of the nanocapsules' geometry in the intracellular milieu with no impairment of the cellular ultrastructure. Furthermore, we observed the lack of cellular toxicity and no alteration in oxygen or reactive oxygen species levels. These results in 3D melanoma models contribute to the development of these nanocapsules for their exploitation in future applications as agents for imaging-guided photothermal therapy. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: The novelty of the work is that our plasmonic nanocapsules are multimodal. They are responsive to X-ray and to multiphoton and single-photon excitation. This allowed us to study their interaction with 2D and 3D cellular structures and specifically to obtain information on tumor cell parameters such as hypoxia, reactive oxygen species, and toxicity. These nanocapsules will be further validated as imaging-guided photothermal probes.
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GOST Copy
Zamora Perez P. et al. Multiphoton imaging of melanoma 3D models with plasmonic nanocapsules // Acta Biomaterialia. 2022. Vol. 142. pp. 308-319.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Zamora Perez P., Sanles-Sobrido M., Rovira Esteva M., Conesa J., Mulens Arias V., Jaque D., Rivera-Gil P. Multiphoton imaging of melanoma 3D models with plasmonic nanocapsules // Acta Biomaterialia. 2022. Vol. 142. pp. 308-319.
RIS |
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RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.actbio.2022.01.052
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2022.01.052
TI - Multiphoton imaging of melanoma 3D models with plasmonic nanocapsules
T2 - Acta Biomaterialia
AU - Zamora Perez, Paula
AU - Sanles-Sobrido, Marcos
AU - Rovira Esteva, Muriel
AU - Conesa, José
AU - Mulens Arias, Vladimir
AU - Jaque, D.
AU - Rivera-Gil, Pilar
PY - 2022
DA - 2022/04/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 308-319
VL - 142
PMID - 35104657
SN - 1742-7061
SN - 1878-7568
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2022_Zamora Perez,
author = {Paula Zamora Perez and Marcos Sanles-Sobrido and Muriel Rovira Esteva and José Conesa and Vladimir Mulens Arias and D. Jaque and Pilar Rivera-Gil},
title = {Multiphoton imaging of melanoma 3D models with plasmonic nanocapsules},
journal = {Acta Biomaterialia},
year = {2022},
volume = {142},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {apr},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2022.01.052},
pages = {308--319},
doi = {10.1016/j.actbio.2022.01.052}
}
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