Tracking cellular uptake, intracellular trafficking and fate of nanoclay particles in human bone marrow stromal cells†
Abstract
Clay nanoparticles, in particular synthetic smectites, have generated interest in the field of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine due to their utility as cross-linkers for polymers in biomaterial design and as protein release modifiers for growth factor delivery. In addition, recent studies have suggested a direct influence on the osteogenic differentiation of responsive stem and progenitor cell populations. Relatively little is known however about the mechanisms underlying nanoclay bioactivity and in particular the cellular processes involved in nanoclay-stem cell interactions. In this study we employed confocal microscopy, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and transmission electron microscopy to track the interactions between clay nanoparticles and human bone marrow stromal cells (hBMSCs). In particular we studied nanoparticle cellular uptake mechanisms and uptake kinetics, intracellular trafficking pathways and the fate of endocytosed nanoclay. We found that nanoclay particles present on the cell surface as μm-sized aggregates, enter hBMSCs through clathrin-mediated endocytosis, and their uptake kinetics follow a linear increase with time during the first week of nanoclay addition. The endocytosed particles were observed within the endosomal/lysosomal compartments and we found evidence for both intracellular degradation of nanoclay and exocytosis as well as an increase in autophagosomal activity. Inhibitor studies indicated that endocytosis was required for nanoclay upregulation of alkaline phosphatase activity but a similar dependency was not observed for autophagy. This study into the nature of nanoclay-stem cell interactions, in particular the intracellular processing of nanosilicate, may provide insights into the mechanisms underlying nanoclay bioactivity and inform the successful utilisation of clay nanoparticles in biomaterial design.