Diogo Volpati, Pedro H. B. Aoki, Therese B. Johansson, Roberto Munita, Frida Ekstrand, Sabrina Ruhrmann, Karl Bacos, Charlotte Ling, Christelle N. Prinz
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Monitoring the Intracellular Fate of Molecular Beacons: The Challenge of False Positive Signals
Molecular beacons (MBs) have been used on surfaces for detecting oligonucleotides. Attempts to use them intracellularly for monitoring mRNA content have been made, however, without any clear conclusion regarding the reliability of the method, mainly due to false positive signals. To reach an understanding of the intracellular fate of MBs, a critical question remains: how long after MB delivery and where in the cell does a false positive signal appear? To answer that question, the MB delivery method should allow for a time-stamped synchronized delivery of MBs to multiple cells, resulting in MBs being distributed in the cytosol immediately after delivery. Herein, nanostraws are used to inject MBs targeting insulin (Ins1) mRNA directly in the cytosol of clonal beta-cells, and the evolution of the MB fluorescence in time and space is monitored. The results show an MB translocation to the nucleus, where MBs are degraded or where they open nonspecifically, before the fluorophore alone is expelled back from the nucleus to the cytosol. The signal translocation to the nucleus and back to the cytosol is faster when scrambled MBs are used. The results shed light on the intracellular fate of MBs and highlight the short time scales before false positive signals become predominant.
期刊介绍:
Advanced NanoBiomed Research will provide an Open Access home for cutting-edge nanomedicine, bioengineering and biomaterials research aimed at improving human health. The journal will capture a broad spectrum of research from increasingly multi- and interdisciplinary fields of the traditional areas of biomedicine, bioengineering and health-related materials science as well as precision and personalized medicine, drug delivery, and artificial intelligence-driven health science.
The scope of Advanced NanoBiomed Research will cover the following key subject areas:
▪ Nanomedicine and nanotechnology, with applications in drug and gene delivery, diagnostics, theranostics, photothermal and photodynamic therapy and multimodal imaging.
▪ Biomaterials, including hydrogels, 2D materials, biopolymers, composites, biodegradable materials, biohybrids and biomimetics (such as artificial cells, exosomes and extracellular vesicles), as well as all organic and inorganic materials for biomedical applications.
▪ Biointerfaces, such as anti-microbial surfaces and coatings, as well as interfaces for cellular engineering, immunoengineering and 3D cell culture.
▪ Biofabrication including (bio)inks and technologies, towards generation of functional tissues and organs.
▪ Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, including scaffolds and scaffold-free approaches, for bone, ligament, muscle, skin, neural, cardiac tissue engineering and tissue vascularization.
▪ Devices for healthcare applications, disease modelling and treatment, such as diagnostics, lab-on-a-chip, organs-on-a-chip, bioMEMS, bioelectronics, wearables, actuators, soft robotics, and intelligent drug delivery systems.
with a strong focus on applications of these fields, from bench-to-bedside, for treatment of all diseases and disorders, such as infectious, autoimmune, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, neurological disorders and cancer; including pharmacology and toxicology studies.