학술논문

Light-activated RNA interference in human embryonic stem cells
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Medical Biotechnology
Engineering
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Regenerative Medicine
Nanotechnology
Stem Cell Research
Biotechnology
Genetics
Stem Cell Research - Embryonic - Human
Bioengineering
5.2 Cellular and gene therapies
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Generic health relevance
Biotin
Cell Line
Gene Products
tat
Gold
Green Fluorescent Proteins
Human Embryonic Stem Cells
Humans
Light
Nanocapsules
Octamer Transcription Factor-3
Peptide Fragments
RNA Interference
RNA
Small Interfering
Transfection
Human embryonic stem cells
Hollow gold nanoshell
RNA interference
TAT peptide
Near-infrared light
Differentiation
Language
Abstract
We describe a near infrared (NIR) light-activated gene silencing method in undifferentiated human embryonic stem cell (hESC) using a plasmonic hollow gold nanoshell (HGN) as the siRNA carrier. Our modular biotin-streptavidin coupling strategy enables positively charged TAT-peptide to coat oligonucleotides-saturated nanoparticles as a stable colloid formation. TAT-peptide coated nanoparticles with dense siRNA loading show efficient penetration into a wide variety of hESC cell lines. The siRNA is freed from the nanoparticles and delivered to the cytosol by femtosecond pulses of NIR light with potentially exquisite spatial and temporal control. The effectiveness of this approach is shown by targeting GFP and Oct4 genes in undifferentiated hESC (H9). The accelerated expression of differentiation markers for all three germ layers resulting from Oct4 knockdown confirms that this method has no detectable adverse effects that limit the range of differentiation. This biocompatible and NIR laser-activated patterning method makes possible single cell resolution of siRNA delivery for diverse studies in stem cell biology, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.