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    Emerging Roles of 1D Vertical Nanostructures in Orchestrating Immune Cell Functions
    (Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2020) Chen, Yaping; Wang, Ji; Li, Xiangling; Hu, Ning; Voelcker, Nicolas H.; Xie, Xi; Elnathan, Roey
    Engineered nano–bio cellular interfaces driven by 1D vertical nanostructures (1D‐VNS) are set to prompt radical progress in modulating cellular processes at the nanoscale. Here, tuneable cell–VNS interfacial interactions are probed and assessed, highlighting the use of 1D‐VNS in immunomodulation, and intracellular delivery into immune cells—both crucial in fundamental and translational biomedical research. With programmable topography and adaptable surface functionalization, 1D‐VNS provide unique biophysical and biochemical cues to orchestrate innate and adaptive immunity, both ex vivo and in vivo. The intimate nanoscale cell–VNS interface leads to membrane penetration and cellular deformation, facilitating efficient intracellular delivery of diverse bioactive cargoes into hard‐to‐transfect immune cells. The unsettled interfacial mechanisms reported to be involved in VNS‐mediated intracellular delivery are discussed. By identifying up‐to‐date progress and fundamental challenges of current 1D‐VNS technology in immune‐cell manipulation, it is hoped that this report gives timely insights for further advances in developing 1D‐VNS as a safe, universal, and highly scalable platform for cell engineering and enrichment in advanced cancer immunotherapy such as chimeric antigen receptor‐T therapy.
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    Silicon-Nanotube-Mediated Intracellular Delivery Enables Ex Vivo Gene Editing
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2020) Chen, Yaping; Aslanoglou, Stella; Murayama, Takahide; Gervinskas, Gediminas; Fitzgerald, Laura I.; Sriram, Sharath; Tian, Jie; Johnston, Angus P.R.; Morikawa, Yasuhiro; Suu, Koukou; Elnathan, Roey; Voelcker, Nicolas H.
    Engineered nano–bio cellular interfaces driven by vertical nanostructured materials are set to spur transformative progress in modulating cellular processes and interrogations. In particular, the intracellular delivery—a core concept in fundamental and translational biomedical research—holds great promise for developing novel cell therapies based on gene modification. This study demonstrates the development of a mechanotransfection platform comprising vertically aligned silicon nanotube (VA-SiNT) arrays for ex vivo gene editing. The internal hollow structure of SiNTs allows effective loading of various biomolecule cargoes; and SiNTs mediate delivery of those cargoes into GPE86 mouse embryonic fibroblasts without compromising their viability. Focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM) and confocal microscopy results demonstrate localized membrane invaginations and accumulation of caveolin-1 at the cell–NT interface, suggesting the presence of endocytic pits. Small-molecule inhibition of endocytosis suggests that active endocytic process plays a role in the intracellular delivery of cargo from SiNTs. SiNT-mediated siRNA intracellular delivery shows the capacity to reduce expression levels of F-actin binding protein (Triobp) and alter the cellular morphology of GPE86. Finally, the successful delivery of Cas9 ribonucleoprotein (RNP) to specifically target mouse Hprt gene is achieved. This NT-enhanced molecular delivery platform has strong potential to support gene editing technologies. © 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim