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research article

Interference of engineered nanomaterials in flow cytometry: A case study

Bohmer, Nils
•
Rippl, Alexandra
•
May, Sarah
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December 1, 2018
Colloids And Surfaces B-Biointerfaces

Nanotechnology is regarded as the enabling technology of the 21st century. However, only a relatively small number of nano-enabled medical and healthcare products finally made their way to the market. There are several reasons why such innovative approaches fail in translation, with one key factor being the uncertainty surrounding their safety assessment. Although well described, interference reactions of engineered nanomaterials (ENM) with classical cytotoxicity assays remain a major source of uncertainty.

Flow cytometry is a powerful, widely used, in vitro technique. Its readout is based on the detection of refracted laser light and fluorescence signals. It is therefore susceptible to ENM interference. Here we investigated possible interferences of ENM in the Annexin V/propidium iodide (PI) assay, which quantifies apoptotic and necrotic cell populations by flow cytometry.

Two case studies were conducted using either silica or gold nanoparticles differing in size, specific surface area and surface chemistry. Both ENM types were found to cause distinct interference reactions at realistic concentrations. Silica particles induced false-positive signals; however only in the absence of a protein corona and in conjunction with a particular fluorophore combination (FITC/PI). In contrast, gold particles led to complex quenching effects which were only marginally influenced by the presence of proteins and occurred for both fluorophore combinations analyzed. We present a versatile spike-in approach which is applicable to all ENM and cell types. It further allows for the identification of a broad range of different interference phenomena, thereby increasing the reliability and quality of flow cytometry and ENM hazard assessment.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.09.021
Web of Science ID

WOS:000455858500076

Author(s)
Bohmer, Nils
Rippl, Alexandra
May, Sarah
Walter, Aurelie  
Heo, Min Beom
Kwak, Minjeong
Roesslein, Matthias
Song, Nam Woong
Wick, Peter
Hirsch, Cordula
Date Issued

2018-12-01

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV

Published in
Colloids And Surfaces B-Biointerfaces
Volume

172

Start page

635

End page

645

Subjects

Biophysics

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Chemistry, Physical

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Materials Science, Biomaterials

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Biophysics

•

Chemistry

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Materials Science

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nanomaterials

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flow cytometry

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interference

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in vitro assay

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human cells

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fluorescence

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mesoporous silica nanoparticles

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in-vitro tests

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carbon nanotubes

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protein corona

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reactive oxygen

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cell

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fluorescence

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impact

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assay

•

adsorption

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
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Available on Infoscience
January 31, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/154240
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