posted on 2020-10-20, 20:18authored byKota Koike, Kazuki Bando, Jun Ando, Hiroyuki Yamakoshi, Naoki Terayama, Kosuke Dodo, Nicholas Isaac Smith, Mikiko Sodeoka, Katsumasa Fujita
Visualizing
live-cell uptake of small-molecule drugs is paramount
for drug development and pharmaceutical sciences. Bioorthogonal imaging
with click chemistry has made significant contributions to the field,
visualizing small molecules in cells. Furthermore, recent developments
in Raman microscopy, including stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy,
have realized direct visualization of alkyne-tagged small-molecule
drugs in live cells. However, Raman and SRS microscopy still suffer
from limited detection sensitivity with low concentration molecules
for observing temporal dynamics of drug uptake. Here, we demonstrate
the combination of alkyne-tag and surface-enhanced Raman scattering
(SERS) microscopy for the real-time monitoring of drug uptake in live
cells. Gold nanoparticles are introduced into lysosomes of live cells
by endocytosis and work as SERS probes. Raman signals of alkynes
can be boosted by enhanced electric fields generated by plasmon resonance
of gold nanoparticles when alkyne-tagged small molecules are colocalized
with the nanoparticles. With time-lapse 3D SERS imaging, this technique
allows us to investigate drug uptake by live cells with different
chemical and physical conditions. We also perform quantitative evaluation
of the uptake speed at the single-cell level using digital SERS counting
under different quantities of drug molecules and temperature conditions.
Our results illustrate that alkyne-tag SERS microscopy has a potential
to be an alternative bioorthogonal imaging technique to investigate
temporal dynamics of small-molecule uptake of live cells for pharmaceutical
research.