Impact of carbondiimide crosslinker used for magnetic carbon nanotube mediated GFP plasmid delivery

Yuzhi Hao, Peng Xu, Chuan He, Xiaoyan Yang, Min Huang, James Xing, Jie Chen
2011 Nanotechnology  
1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbondiimide hydrochloride (EDC) is commonly used as a crosslinker to help bind biomolecules, such as DNA plasmids, with nanostructures. However, EDC often remains, after a crosslink reaction, in the micro-aperture of the nanostructure, e.g., carbon nanotube. The remaining EDC shows positive green fluorescent signals and makes a nanostructure with a strong cytotoxicity which induces cell death. The toxicity of EDC was confirmed on a breast cancer cell line
more » ... -7) and two leukemic cell lines (THP-1 and KG-1). The MCF-7 cells mainly underwent necrosis after treatment with EDC, which was verified by fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) annexin V staining, video microscopy and scanning electronic microscopy (SEM). If the EDC was not removed completely, the nanostructures with remaining EDC produced a green fluorescent background that could interfere with flow cytometry (FACS) measurement and result in false information about GFP plasmid delivery. Effective methods to remove residual EDC on macromolecules were also developed.
doi:10.1088/0957-4484/22/28/285103 pmid:21654030 fatcat:uq2hfcckxfhwnb7xs36hpttz4i