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Download fileSpontaneous Internalization of Cell Penetrating Peptide-Modified Nanowires into Primary Neurons
journal contribution
posted on 2016-02-04, 16:50 authored by Jae-Hyun Lee, Anqi Zhang, Siheng
Sean You, Charles M. LieberSemiconductor
nanowire (NW) devices that can address intracellular electrophysiological
events with high sensitivity and spatial resolution are emerging as
key tools in nanobioelectronics. Intracellular delivery of NWs without
compromising cellular integrity and metabolic activity has, however,
proven difficult without external mechanical forces or electrical
pulses. Here, we introduce a biomimetic approach in which a cell penetrating
peptide, the trans-activating transcriptional activator (TAT) from
human immunodeficiency virus 1, is linked to the surface of Si NWs
to facilitate spontaneous internalization of NWs into primary neuronal
cells. Confocal microscopy imaging studies at fixed time points demonstrate
that TAT-conjugated NWs (TAT-NWs) are fully internalized into mouse
hippocampal neurons, and quantitative image analyses reveal an ca.
15% internalization efficiency. In addition, live cell dynamic imaging
of NW internalization shows that NW penetration begins within 10–20
min after binding to the membrane and that NWs become fully internalized
within 30–40 min. The generality of cell penetrating peptide
modification method is further demonstrated by internalization of
TAT-NWs into primary dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons.
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Keywords
DRGTATpeptide modification methodPrimary NeuronsSemiconductor nanowiredorsal root ganglionNW internalizationimage analysestime pointsbiomimetic approachConfocal microscopy imaging studiesmouse hippocampal neuronsintracellular electrophysiological eventsIntracellular deliverySpontaneous InternalizationNW penetrationSi NWs