JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Nucleus and Mitochondria Targeting Theranostic Plasmonic Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy Nanoprobes as a Means for Revealing Molecular Stress Response Differences in Hyperthermia Cell Death between Cancerous and Normal Cells.

Analytical Chemistry 2018 November 21
Metallic plasmonic nanoparticles have been intensively exploited as theranostic nanoprobes for plasmonic photothermal therapy (PPT) and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) applications. But the underlying molecular mechanisms associated with PPT-induced apoptosis between cancerous and normal cells have remained largely unknown or disputed. In this study, we designed an organelle-targeting theranostic plasmonic SERS nanoprobe (CDs-Ag/Au NS) composed of porous Ag/Au nanoshell (p-Ag/Au NSs) and carbon dots (CDs) for nucleus and mitochondria targeted PPT of cells. The differences in molecular stress response in the PPT-induced hyperthermia cell death between cancerous HeLa and normal L929 and H8 cells have been revealed by site-specific single-cell SERS detection. The contents of tryptophan (Trp), phenylalanine (Phe), and tyrosine (Tyr) in HeLa cells were found more evidently increased than L929 and H8 cells during the PPT-induced cell-death process. And from the mitochondria point of view, we found that the PPT-induced cell apoptosis for HeLa cells mainly stems from (or is regulated through) cellular thermal stress-responsive proteins, while for L929 and H8 cells it seems more related to DNA. Understanding molecular stress response difference of the PPT-induced cell apoptosis between cancerous and normal cells is helpful for diagnosis and treatment of cancer, and the method will open an avenue for single-cell studies.

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