posted on 2023-02-02, 22:43authored byKatherine
E. Rogers, Okhil K. Nag, Kimihiro Susumu, Eunkeu Oh, James B. Delehanty
In mammalian cells, plasma membrane potential plays vital
roles
in both physiology and pathology and it is controlled by a network
of membrane-resident ion channels. There is considerable interest
in the use of nanoparticles (NPs) to control biological functions,
including the modulation of membrane potential. The photoexcitation
of gold NPs (AuNPs) tethered close to the plasma membrane has been
shown to induce membrane depolarization via localized heating of the
AuNP surface coupled with the opening of voltage-gated sodium channels.
Previous work has employed spherical AuNPs (AuNS) with absorption
in the 500–600 nm range for this purpose. However, AuNP materials
with absorption at longer wavelengths [e.g., near-infrared (NIR)]
would enable greater tissue penetration depth in vivo. We show here the use of new anisotropic-shaped AuNPs [gold nanoflowers
(AuNFs)] with broad absorption spanning into the NIR part of the spectrum
(∼650–1000 nm). The AuNFs are directly synthesized with
bidentate thiolate ligands, which preserves the AuNF’s shape
and colloidal stability, while facilitating conjugation to biomolecules.
We describe the characterization of the AuNF particles and demonstrate
that they adhere to the plasma membrane when bioconjugated to PEGylated
cholesterol (PEG-Chol) moieties. The AuNF-PEG-Chol mediated the depolarization
of rat adrenal medulla pheochromocytoma (PC-12) neuron-like cells
more effectively than AuNS-PEG-Chol and unconjugated AuNS and AuNF
when photoexcited at ∼561 or ∼640 nm. Importantly, AuNF
induction of depolarization had no impact on cellular viability. This
work demonstrates anisotropic AuNFs as an enabling nanomaterial for
use in cellular depolarization and the spatiotemporal control of cellular
activity.