AI Article Synopsis

  • Quantitative analysis of nanoparticle uptake at the cellular level is crucial for evaluating their effects in nanomedicine, but it presents significant technical challenges.
  • A new method was developed using high-resolution transmission x-ray microimages to analyze metal nanoparticle presence in different cell types, demonstrating successful tests with gold nanoparticles in EMT and HeLa cells.
  • The study highlights the method's accuracy in measuring differences in nanoparticle uptake and cluster sizes between 2D and 3D cell cultures, emphasizing the importance of 3D analysis for better understanding these interactions.

Article Abstract

Background: Quantitative analysis of nanoparticle uptake at the cellular level is critical to nanomedicine procedures. In particular, it is required for a realistic evaluation of their effects. Unfortunately, quantitative measurements of nanoparticle uptake still pose a formidable technical challenge. We present here a method to tackle this problem and analyze the number of metal nanoparticles present in different types of cells. The method relies on high-lateral-resolution (better than 30 nm) transmission x-ray microimages with both absorption contrast and phase contrast -- including two-dimensional (2D) projection images and three-dimensional (3D) tomographic reconstructions that directly show the nanoparticles.

Results: Practical tests were successfully conducted on bare and polyethylene glycol (PEG) coated gold nanoparticles obtained by x-ray irradiation. Using two different cell lines, EMT and HeLa, we obtained the number of nanoparticle clusters uptaken by each cell and the cluster size. Furthermore, the analysis revealed interesting differences between 2D and 3D cultured cells as well as between 2D and 3D data for the same 3D specimen.

Conclusions: We demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of our method, proving that it is accurate enough to measure the nanoparticle uptake differences between cells as well as the sizes of the formed nanoparticle clusters. The differences between 2D and 3D cultures and 2D and 3D images stress the importance of the 3D analysis which is made possible by our approach.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3098147PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-3155-9-14DOI Listing

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