A carbon nanotube optical reporter maps endolysosomal lipid flux Journal Article


Authors: Jena, P. V.; Roxbury, D.; Galassi, T. V.; Akkari, L.; Horoszko, C. P.; Iaea, D. B.; Budhathoki-Uprety, J.; Pipalia, N.; Haka, A. S.; Harvey, J. D.; Mittal, J.; Maxfield, F. R.; Joyce, J. A.; Heller, D. A.
Article Title: A carbon nanotube optical reporter maps endolysosomal lipid flux
Abstract: Lipid accumulation within the lumen of endolysosomal vesicles is observed in various pathologies including atherosclerosis, liver disease, neurological disorders, lysosomal storage disorders, and cancer. Current methods cannot measure lipid flux specifically within the lysosomal lumen of live cells. We developed an optical reporter, composed of a photoluminescent carbon nanotube of a single chirality, that responds to lipid accumulation via modulation of the nanotube's optical band gap. The engineered nanomaterial, composed of short, single-stranded DNA and a single nanotube chirality, localizes exclusively to the lumen of endolysosomal organelles without adversely affecting cell viability or proliferation or organelle morphology, integrity, or function. The emission wavelength of the reporter can be spatially resolved from within the endolysosomal lumen to generate quantitative maps of lipid content in live cells. Endolysosomal lipid accumulation in cell lines, an example of drug-induced phospholipidosis, was observed for multiple drugs in macrophages, and measurements of patient-derived Niemann-Pick type C fibroblasts identified lipid accumulation and phenotypic reversal of this lysosomal storage disease. Single-cell measurements using the reporter discerned subcellular differences in equilibrium lipid content, illuminating significant intracellular heterogeneity among endolysosomal organelles of differentiating bone-marrow-derived monocytes. Single-cell kinetics of lipoprotein-derived cholesterol accumulation within macrophages revealed rates that differed among cells by an order of magnitude. This carbon nanotube optical reporter of endolysosomal lipid content in live cells confers additional capabilities for drug development processes and the investigation of lipid-linked diseases. © 2017 American Chemical Society.
Keywords: cytology; live-cell imaging; dna; cell culture; macrophages; diseases; cells; chirality; infrared devices; carbon nanotubes; nanotubes; single-walled carbon nanotubes (swcn); single cells; single-walled carbon nanotubes; near-infrared fluorescence; neurological disorders; yarn; hyperspectral imaging; hyperspectral microscopy; single-cell sensing; energy gap; cholesterol accumulation; hyperspectral; lysosomal storage disorder; single cell measurement
Journal Title: ACS Nano
Volume: 11
Issue: 11
ISSN: 1936-0851
Publisher: American Chemical Society  
Date Published: 2017-11-28
Start Page: 10689
End Page: 10703
Language: English
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b04743
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5707631
PUBMED: 28898055
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 January 2018 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Johanna A Joyce
    67 Joyce
  2. Leila Akkari
    15 Akkari
  3. Daniel Alan Heller
    112 Heller
  4. Prakrit Vaibhav Jena
    27 Jena
  5. Thomas Vito Galassi
    13 Galassi
  6. Jackson D Harvey
    13 Harvey