6 research outputs found

    Slow dynamics in cylindrically confined colloidal suspensions

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    We study bidisperse colloidal suspensions confined within glass microcapillary tubes to model the glass transition in confined cylindrical geometries. We use high speed three-dimensional confocal microscopy to observe particle motions for a wide range of volume fractions and tube radii. Holding volume fraction constant, we find that particles move slower in thinner tubes. The tube walls induce a gradient in particle mobility: particles move substantially slower near the walls. This suggests that the confinement-induced glassiness may be due to an interfacial effect.Comment: Submitted to AIP conference proceedings for "Slow Dynamics in Complex Systems" (Sendai, Japan, Dec. 2012

    A comparison of inverted and upright laser-activated titanium nitride micropyramids for intracellular delivery

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    The delivery of biomolecules into cells relies on porating the plasma membrane to allow exterior molecules to enter the cell via diffusion. Various established delivery methods, including electroporation and viral techniques, come with drawbacks such as low viability or immunotoxicity, respectively. An optics-based delivery method that uses laser pulses to excite plasmonic titanium nitride (TiN) micropyramids presents an opportunity to overcome these shortcomings. This laser excitation generates localized nano-scale heating effects and bubbles, which produce transient pores in the cell membrane for payload entry. TiN is a promising plasmonic material due to its high hardness and thermal stability. In this study, two designs of TiN micropyramid arrays are constructed and tested. These designs include inverted and upright pyramid structures, each coated with a 50-nm layer of TiN. Simulation software shows that the inverted and upright designs reach temperatures of 875 degrees C and 307 degrees C, respectively, upon laser irradiation. Collectively, experimental results show that these reusable designs achieve maximum cell poration efficiency greater than 80% and viability greater than 90% when delivering calcein dye to target cells. Overall, we demonstrate that TiN microstructures are strong candidates for future use in biomedical devices for intracellular delivery and regenerative medicine

    Plasmonic Tipless Pyramid Arrays for Cell Poration

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    Improving the efficiency, cell survival, and throughput of methods to modify and control the genetic expression of cells is of great benefit to biology and medicine. We investigate, both computationally and experimentally, a nanostructured substrate made of tipless pyramids for plasmonic-induced transfection. By optimizing the geometrical parameters for an excitation wavelength of 800 nm, we demonstrate a 100-fold intensity enhancement of the electric near field at the cell–substrate contact area, while the low absorption typical for gold is maintained. We demonstrate that such a substrate can induce transient poration of cells by a purely optically induced process

    Analysis of poration-induced changes in cells from laser-activated plasmonic substrates

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    Laser-exposed plasmonic substrates permeabilize the plasma membrane of cells when in close contact to deliver cell-impermeable cargo. While studies have determined the cargo delivery efficiency and viability of laser-exposed plasmonic substrates, morphological changes in a cell have not been quantified. We porated myoblast C2C12 cells on a plasmonic pyramid array using a 532-nm laser with 850-ps pulse length and time-lapse fluorescence imaging to quantify cellular changes. We obtain a poration efficiency of 80%, viability of 90%, and a pore radius of 20 nm. We quantified area changes in the plasma membrane attached to the substrate (10% decrease), nucleus (5 - 10% decrease), and cytoplasm (5 - 10% decrease) over 1 h after laser treatment. Cytoskeleton fibers show a change of 50% in the alignment, or coherency, of fibers, which stabilizes after 10 mins. We investigate structural and morphological changes due to the poration process to enable the safe development of this technique for therapeutic applications

    Intracellular Delivery Using Nanosecond-Laser Excitation of Large-Area Plasmonic Substrates

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    Efficiently delivering functional cargo to millions of cells on the time scale of minutes will revolutionize gene therapy, drug discovery, and high-throughput screening. Recent studies of intracellular delivery with thermoplasmonic structured surfaces show promising results but in most cases require time- or cost-intensive fabrication or lead to unreproducible surfaces. We designed and fabricated large-area (14 × 14 mm), photolithography-based, template-stripped plasmonic substrates that are nanosecond laser-activated to form transient pores in cells for cargo entry. We optimized fabrication to produce plasmonic structures that are ultrasmooth and precisely patterned over large areas. We used flow cytometry to characterize the delivery efficiency of cargos ranging in size from 0.6 to 2000 kDa to cells (up to 95% for the smallest molecule) and viability of cells (up to 98%). This technique offers a throughput of 50000 cells/min, which can be scaled up as necessary. This technique is also cost-effective as each large-area photolithography substrate can be used to deliver cargo to millions of cells, and switching to a nanosecond laser makes the setup cheaper and easier to use. The approach we present offers additional desirable features: spatial selectivity, reproducibility, minimal residual fragments, and cost-effective fabrication. This research supports the development of safer genetic and viral disease therapies as well as research tools for fundamental biological research that rely on effectively delivering molecules to millions of living cells
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