1 research outputs found
Synthesis and Characterization of Functional Nanofilm-Coated Live Immune Cells
Layer-by-layer
(LbL) assembly techniques have been extensively studied in cell biology
because of their simplicity of preparation and versatility. The applications
of the LbL platform technology using polysaccharides, silicon, and
graphene have been investigated. However, the applications of the
above-mentioned technology using living cells remain to be fully understood.
This study demonstrates a living cell-based LbL platform using various
types of living cells. In addition, it confirms that the surplus charge
on the outer surface of the coated cells can be used to bind the target
protein. We develop a living cell-based LbL platform technology by
stacking layers of hyaluronic acid (HA) and poly-l-lysine
(PLL). The HA/PLL stacking results in three bilayers with a thickness
of 4 ± 1 nm on the cell surface. Furthermore, the multilayer
nanofilms on the cells are completely degraded after 3 days of the
application of the LbL method. We also evaluate and visualize three
bilayers of the nanofilm on adherent (AML-12 cells)-, nonadherent
(trypsin-treated AML-12 cells)-, and circulation type [peripheral
blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)] cells by analyzing the zeta potential,
cell viability, and imaging via scanning electron microscopy and confocal
microscopy. Finally, we study the cytotoxicity of the nanofilm and
characteristic functions of the immune cells after the nanofilm coating.
The multilayer nanofilms are not acutely cytotoxic and did not inhibit
the immune response of the PBMCs against stimulant. We conclude that
a two bilayer nanofilm would be ideal for further study in any cell
type. The living cell-based LbL platform is expected to be useful
for a variety of applications in cell biology