2 resultados para BUCCAL EPITHELIAL-CELLS

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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As the elastic response of cell membranes to mechanical stimuli plays a key role in various cellular processes, novel biophysical strategies to quantify the elasticity of native membranes under physiological conditions at a nanometer scale are gaining interest. In order to investigate the elastic response of apical membranes, elasticity maps of native membrane sheets, isolated from MDCK II (Madine Darby Canine kidney strain II) epithelial cells, were recorded by local indentation with an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). To exclude the underlying substrate effect on membrane indentation, a highly ordered gold coated porous array with a pore diameter of 1.2 μm was used to support apical membranes. Overlays of fluorescence and AFM images show that intact apical membrane sheets are attached to poly-D-lysine coated porous substrate. Force indentation measurements reveal an extremely soft elastic membrane response if it is indented at the center of the pore in comparison to a hard repulsion on the adjacent rim used to define the exact contact point. A linear dependency of force versus indentation (-dF/dh) up to 100 nm penetration depth enabled us to define an apparent membrane spring constant (kapp) as the slope of a linear fit with a stiffness value of for native apical membrane in PBS. A correlation between fluorescence intensity and kapp is also reported. Time dependent hysteresis observed with native membranes is explained by a viscoelastic solid model of a spring connected to a Kelvin-Voight solid with a time constant of 0.04 s. No hysteresis was reported with chemically fixated membranes. A combined linear and non linear elastic response is suggested to relate the experimental data of force indentation curves to the elastic modulus and the membrane thickness. Membrane bending is the dominant contributor to linear elastic indentation at low loads, whereas stretching is the dominant contributor for non linear elastic response at higher loads. The membrane elastic response was controlled either by stiffening with chemical fixatives or by softening with F-actin disrupters. Overall, the presented setup is ideally suitable to study the interactions of the apical membrane with the underlying cytoskeleton by means of force indentation elasticity maps combined with fluorescence imaging.

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The physicochemical properties of nanoparticles make them suitable for biomedical applications. Due to their ‘straight-forward’ synthesis, their known biocompatibility, their strong optical properties, their ability for targeted drug delivery and their uptake potential into cells gold nanoparticles are highly interesting for biomedical applications. In particular, the therapy of brain diseases (neurodegenerative diseases, ischemic stroke) is a challenge for contemporary medicine and gold nanoparticles are currently being studied in the hope of improving drug delivery to the brain.rnIn this thesis three major conclusions from the generated data are emphasized.rn1. After improvement of the isolation protocol and culture conditions, the formation of a monolayer of porcine brain endothelial cells on transwell filters lead to a reproducible and tight in vitro monoculture which exhibited in vivo blood brain barrier (BBB) characteristics. The transport of nanoparticles across the barrier was studied using this model.rn2. Although gold nanoparticles are known to be relatively bioinert, contaminants of the nanoparticle synthesis (i.e. CTAB or sodium citrate) increased the cytotoxicity of gold nanoparticles, as shown by various publications. The results presented in this thesis demonstrate that contaminants of the nanoparticle synthesis such as sodium citrate increased the cytotoxicity of the gold nanoparticles in endothelial cells but in a more dramatic manner in epithelial cells. Considering the increased uptake of these particles by epithelial cells compared to endothelial cells it was demonstrated that the observed decrease of cell viability appeared to be related to the amount of internalized gold nanoparticles in combination with the presence of the contaminant.rn3. Systematically synthesized gold nanoparticles of different sizes with a variety of surface modifications (different chemical groups and net charges) were investigated for their uptake behaviour and functional impairment of endothelial cells, one of the major cell types making up the BBB. The targeting of these different nanoparticles to endothelial cells from different parts of the body was investigated in a comparative study of human microvascular dermal and cerebral endothelial cells. In these experiments it was demonstrated that different properties of the nanoparticles resulted in a variety of uptake patterns into cells. Positively charged gold nanoparticles were internalized in high amounts, while PEGylated nanoparticles were not taken up by both cell types. Differences in the uptake behavior were also demonstrated for neutrally charged particles of different sizes, coated with hydroxypropylamine or glucosamine. Endothelial cells of the brain specifically internalized 35nm neutrally charged hydroxypropylamine-coated gold nanoparticles in larger amounts compared to dermal microvascular endothelial cells, indicating a "targeting" for brain endothelial cells. Co-localization studies with flotillin-1 and flotillin-2 showed that the gold nanoparticles were internalized by endocytotic pathways. Furthermore, these nanoparticles exhibited transcytosis across the endothelial cell barrier in an in vitro BBB model generated with primary porcine brain endothelial cells (1.). In conclusion, gold nanoparticles with different sizes and surface characteristics showed different uptake patterns in dermal and cerebral endothelial cells. In addition, gold nanoparticles with a specific size and defined surface modification were able to cross the blood-brain barrier in a porcine in vitro model and may thus be useful for controlled delivery of drugs to the brain.