Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are important intercellular mediators regulating health and diseases. Conventional methods for EV surface marker profiling, which was based on population measurements, masked the cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the quantity and phenotypes of EV secretion. Herein, by using spatially patterned antibody barcodes, we realized multiplexed profiling of single-cell EV secretion from more than 1,000 single cells simultaneously. Applying this platform to profile human oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) cell lines led to a deep understanding of previously undifferentiated single-cell heterogeneity underlying EV secretion. Notably, we observed that the decrement of certain EV phenotypes (e.g.,CD63+EV) was associated with the invasive feature of both OSCC cell lines and primary OSCC cells. We also realized multiplexed detection of EV secretion and cytokines secretion simultaneously from the same single cells to investigate the multidimensional spectrum of cellular communications, from which we resolved tiered functional subgroups with distinct secretion profiles by visualized clustering and principal component analysis. In particular, we found that different cell subgroups dominated EV secretion and cytokine secretion. The technology introduced here enables a comprehensive evaluation of EV secretion heterogeneity at single-cell level, which may become an indispensable tool to complement current single-cell analysis and EV research.
Calcium‐metal batteries (CMBs) provide a promising option for high‐energy and cost‐effective energy‐storage technology beyond the current state‐of‐the‐art lithium‐ion batteries. Nevertheless, the development of room‐temperature CMBs is significantly impeded by the poor reversibility and short lifespan of the calcium‐metal anode. A solvation manipulation strategy is reported to improve the plating/stripping reversibility of calcium‐metal anodes by enhancing the desolvation kinetics of calcium ions in the electrolyte. The introduction of lithium salt changes the electrolyte structure considerably by reducing coordination number of calcium ions in the first solvation shell. As a result, an unprecedented Coulombic efficiency of up to 99.1 % is achieved for galvanostatic plating/stripping of the calcium‐metal anode, accompanied by a very stable long‐term cycling performance over 200 cycles at room temperature. This work may open up new opportunities for development of practical CMBs.
Paper microfluidics has attracted much attention since its first introduction around one decade ago due to the merits such as low cost, ease of fabrication and operation, portability, and facile integration with other devices. The dominant application for paper microfluidics still lies in point‐of‐care testing (POCT), which holds great promise to provide diagnostic tools to meet the ASSURED criteria. With micro/nanostructures inside, paper substrates provide a natural 3D scaffold to mimic native cellular microenvironments and create excellent biointerfaces for cell analysis applications, such as long‐term 3D cell culture, cell capture/phenotyping, and cell‐related biochemical analysis (small molecules, protein DNA, etc.). This review summarizes cell‐related applications based on various engineered paper microdevices and provides some perspectives for paper microfluidics‐based cell analysis.
PurposeCell-in-cell structures are created by one living cell entering another homotypic or heterotypic living cell, which usually leads to the death of the internalized cell, specifically through caspase-dependent cell death (emperitosis) or lysosome-dependent cell death (entosis). Although entosis has attracted great attention, its occurrence is controversial, because one cell line used in its study (MCF-7) is deficient in caspase-3.MethodsWe investigated this issue using MCF-7 and A431 cell lines, which often display cell-in-cell invasion, and have different levels of caspase-3 expression. Cell-in-cell death morphology, microstructures, and signaling pathways were compared in the two cell lines.ResultsOur results confirmed that MCF-7 cells are caspase-3 deficient with a partial deletion in the CASP-3 gene. These cells underwent cell death that lacked typical apoptotic properties after staurosporine treatment, whereas caspase-3-sufficient A431 cells displayed typical apoptosis. The presence of caspase-3 was related neither to the lysosome-dependent nor to the caspase-dependent cell-in-cell death pathway. However, the existence of caspase-3 was associated with a switch from lysosome-dependent cell-in-cell death to the apoptotic cell-in-cell death pathway during entosis. Moreover, cellular hypoxia, mitochondrial swelling, release of cytochrome C, and autophagy were observed in internalized cells during entosis.ConclusionThe occurrence of caspase-independent entosis is not a cell-specific process. In addition, entosis actually represents a cellular self-repair system, functioning through autophagy, to degrade damaged mitochondria resulting from cellular hypoxia in cell-in-cell structures. However, sustained autophagy-associated signal activation, without reduction in cellular hypoxia, eventually leads to lysosome-dependent intracellular cell death.
A one-step and eco-friendly approach for the room-temperature synthesis of trypsin-mediated three-dimensional (3D) gold nanoflowers (AuNFs) with high colloidal stability is demonstrated. To prepare AuNFs, ascorbic acid (AA) was quickly added into the premixed solution of HAuCl(4) and trypsin at pH = 5.0. The results show that the molar ratio and feeding order of reactant agents, pH and reaction time play important roles in the formation of NFs. The growth mechanism of AuNFs is suggested as three steps: (1) immobilization of AuCl(4)(-) ions with a positively charged trypsin template, (2) spontaneous reduction of AuCl(4)(-) ions with AA in situ and capping Au(0) by 12 cysteines of trypsin, (3) reduction of more AuCl(4)(-) ions on the Au nuclei formed in the initial stages and anisotropic growth into AuNFs.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are important intercellular mediators regulating health and disease. Conventional EVs surface marker profiling, which was based on population measurements, masked the cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the quantity and phenotypes of EVs secretion. Herein, by using spatially patterned antibodies barcode, we realized multiplexed profiling of single-cell EVs secretion from more than 1000 single cells simultaneously. Applying this platform to profile human oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) cell lines led to deep understanding of previously undifferentiated single cell heterogeneity underlying EVs secretion. Notably, we observed the decrement of certain EV phenotypes (e.g. CD63+ EVs) were associated with the invasive feature of both OSCC cell lines and primary OSCC cells. We also realized multiplexed detection of EVs secretion and cytokines secretion simultaneously from the same single cells to investigate multidimensional spectrum of intercellular communications, from which we resolved three functional subgroups with distinct secretion profiles by visualized clustering. In particular, we found EVs secretion and cytokines secretion were generally dominated by different cell subgroups. The technology introduced here enables comprehensive evaluation of EVs secretion heterogeneity at single cell level, which may become an indispensable tool to complement current single cell analysis and EV research. Significance Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell derived nano-sized particles medicating cell-cell communication and transferring biology information molecules like nucleic acids to regulate human health and disease. Conventional methods for EV surface markers profiling can't tell the differences in the quantity and phenotypes of EVs secretion between cells. To address this need, we developed a platform for profiling an array of surface markers on EVs from large numbers of single cells, enabling more comprehensive monitoring of cellular communications. Single cell EVs secretion assay led to previously unobserved cell heterogeneity underlying EVs secretion, which might open up new avenues for studying cell communication and cell microenvironment in both basic and clinical research.
Reproducing the physiological environment of blood vessels for the in vitro investigation of endothelial cell functions is very challenging. Here, we describe a vascular-like structure based on a three-dimensional (3D) gelatin chip with good compatibility and permeability which is also cost-effective and easy to produce. The controllable lumen diameter and wall thickness enable close mimicking of blood vessels in vitro. The 3D gelatin matrix between adjacent lumens is capable of generating soluble-factor gradients inside, and diffusion of molecules with different molecular weights through the matrix is studied. The cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells proliferate on the gelatin lumen linings to form a vascular lumen. The hemodynamic behavior including adhesion, alignment of endothelial cells (ECs) under shear stress and pulsatile stretch is studied. Furthermore, a microelectrode comprising TiC/C nanowire arrays is fabricated to detect nitric oxide with sub-nM detection limits and NO generation from the cultured ECs is monitored in real time. This vascular model reproduces the surrounding parenchyma of endothelial cells and mimics the hemodynamics inside blood vessels very well, thereby enabling potential direct investigation of hemodynamics, angiogenesis, and tumor metastasis in vitro.
Many efforts have been made toward the advancement of capillary electrophoresis chemiluminescence (CE-CL) detection and its applications through continuous development and improvement of interfaces. In this study, a novel rotary cell for CE-CL detection was fabricated and evaluated. A ring-shaped narrow channel with a quartz bottom is made in a cell body to hold CL reactants and act as the reaction chamber. The CE capillary is placed closely to the bottom of the reaction chamber where analyte is deposited into the CL reactants for reactions to occur. Detection is achieved with a photomultiplier tube below the reaction channel. An advantage of the rotary reaction cell is that it renews the reactants at the capillary end as it revolves at a preset speed during experiments. The rotary detection cell presents a new concept to the conventional coaxial-flow configuration by solving the problems of bubble formation and flow blockage that often interrupt the electrophoresis. Two standard proteins, horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and hemoglobin (Hb), were used to evaluate the interface's performance with luminol/H(2)O(2) CL system. Satisfactory sensitivities (LOD of 0.91 x 10(-9) M for HRP, and 4.37 x 10(-8) M for Hb at S/N = 3) were obtained in this proof-of-concept experiment. This novel design provides a straightforward and robust interface for CE-CL hyphenation.
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