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Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer

Non-genetic photostimulation, which allows for control over cellular activity via the use of cell-targeting phototransducers, is widely used nowadays to study and modulate/restore biological functions. This approach relies on non-covalent interactions between the phototransducer and the cell membran...

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Autores principales: Vurro, Vito, Moschetta, Matteo, Bondelli, Gaia, Sardar, Samim, Magni, Arianna, Sesti, Valentina, Paternò, Giuseppe Maria, Bertarelli, Chiara, D’Andrea, Cosimo, Lanzani, Guglielmo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10220526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37233599
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13050538
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author Vurro, Vito
Moschetta, Matteo
Bondelli, Gaia
Sardar, Samim
Magni, Arianna
Sesti, Valentina
Paternò, Giuseppe Maria
Bertarelli, Chiara
D’Andrea, Cosimo
Lanzani, Guglielmo
author_facet Vurro, Vito
Moschetta, Matteo
Bondelli, Gaia
Sardar, Samim
Magni, Arianna
Sesti, Valentina
Paternò, Giuseppe Maria
Bertarelli, Chiara
D’Andrea, Cosimo
Lanzani, Guglielmo
author_sort Vurro, Vito
collection PubMed
description Non-genetic photostimulation, which allows for control over cellular activity via the use of cell-targeting phototransducers, is widely used nowadays to study and modulate/restore biological functions. This approach relies on non-covalent interactions between the phototransducer and the cell membrane, thus implying that cell conditions and membrane status can dictate the effectiveness of the method. For instance, although immortalized cell lines are traditionally used in photostimulation experiments, it has been demonstrated that the number of passages they undergo is correlated to the worsening of cell conditions. In principle, this could impact cell responsivity against exogenous stressors, including photostimulation. However, these aspects have usually been neglected in previous experiments. In this work, we investigated whether cell passages could affect membrane properties (such as polarity and fluidity). We applied optical spectroscopy and electrophysiological measurements in two different biological models: (i) an epithelial immortalized cell line (HEK-293T cells) and (ii) liposomes. Different numbers of cell passages were compared to a different morphology in the liposome membrane. We demonstrated that cell membranes show a significant decrease in ordered domains upon increasing the passage number. Furthermore, we observed that cell responsivity against external stressors is markedly different between aged and non-aged cells. Firstly, we noted that the thermal-disordering effect that is usually observed in membranes is more evident in aged cells than in non-aged ones. We then set up a photostimulation experiment by using a membrane-targeted azobenzene as a phototransducer (Ziapin2). As an example of a functional consequence of such a condition, we showed that the rate of isomerization of an intramembrane molecular transducer is significantly impaired in aged cells. The reduction in the photoisomerization rate translates in cells with a sustained reduction of the Ziapin2-related hyperpolarization of the membrane potential and an overall increase in the molecule fluorescence. Overall, our results suggest that membrane stimulation strongly depends on membrane order, highlighting the importance of cell passage during the characterization of the stimulation tools. This study can shine light on the correlation between aging and the development of diseases driven by membrane degradation as well as on the different cell responsivities against external stressors, such as temperature and photostimulation.
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spelling pubmed-102205262023-05-28 Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer Vurro, Vito Moschetta, Matteo Bondelli, Gaia Sardar, Samim Magni, Arianna Sesti, Valentina Paternò, Giuseppe Maria Bertarelli, Chiara D’Andrea, Cosimo Lanzani, Guglielmo Membranes (Basel) Article Non-genetic photostimulation, which allows for control over cellular activity via the use of cell-targeting phototransducers, is widely used nowadays to study and modulate/restore biological functions. This approach relies on non-covalent interactions between the phototransducer and the cell membrane, thus implying that cell conditions and membrane status can dictate the effectiveness of the method. For instance, although immortalized cell lines are traditionally used in photostimulation experiments, it has been demonstrated that the number of passages they undergo is correlated to the worsening of cell conditions. In principle, this could impact cell responsivity against exogenous stressors, including photostimulation. However, these aspects have usually been neglected in previous experiments. In this work, we investigated whether cell passages could affect membrane properties (such as polarity and fluidity). We applied optical spectroscopy and electrophysiological measurements in two different biological models: (i) an epithelial immortalized cell line (HEK-293T cells) and (ii) liposomes. Different numbers of cell passages were compared to a different morphology in the liposome membrane. We demonstrated that cell membranes show a significant decrease in ordered domains upon increasing the passage number. Furthermore, we observed that cell responsivity against external stressors is markedly different between aged and non-aged cells. Firstly, we noted that the thermal-disordering effect that is usually observed in membranes is more evident in aged cells than in non-aged ones. We then set up a photostimulation experiment by using a membrane-targeted azobenzene as a phototransducer (Ziapin2). As an example of a functional consequence of such a condition, we showed that the rate of isomerization of an intramembrane molecular transducer is significantly impaired in aged cells. The reduction in the photoisomerization rate translates in cells with a sustained reduction of the Ziapin2-related hyperpolarization of the membrane potential and an overall increase in the molecule fluorescence. Overall, our results suggest that membrane stimulation strongly depends on membrane order, highlighting the importance of cell passage during the characterization of the stimulation tools. This study can shine light on the correlation between aging and the development of diseases driven by membrane degradation as well as on the different cell responsivities against external stressors, such as temperature and photostimulation. MDPI 2023-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10220526/ /pubmed/37233599 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13050538 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Vurro, Vito
Moschetta, Matteo
Bondelli, Gaia
Sardar, Samim
Magni, Arianna
Sesti, Valentina
Paternò, Giuseppe Maria
Bertarelli, Chiara
D’Andrea, Cosimo
Lanzani, Guglielmo
Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title_full Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title_fullStr Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title_full_unstemmed Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title_short Membrane Order Effect on the Photoresponse of an Organic Transducer
title_sort membrane order effect on the photoresponse of an organic transducer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10220526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37233599
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13050538
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