Publication | Open Access
Nanoarchitectonics meets cell surface engineering: shape recognition of human cells by halloysite-doped silica cell imprints
25
Citations
35
References
2019
Year
Tissue EngineeringNanoarchitectonics MeetsSilica Inorganic ShellsEngineeringNanostructured SurfaceBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringNanomedicineShape RecognitionBioimagingNanosensorHalloysite Clay NanotubesNanotechnologyNanobiotechnologyCell EngineeringCell BiologyCell Surface EngineeringBiofunctional MaterialNanomaterialsBioelectronicsSurface EngineeringBiomemsMedicineBiomaterialsBiocompatible MaterialBiomedical ApplicationsNanoarchitectonics
Cell surface engineering, as a practical manifestation of nanoarchitectonics, is a powerful tool to modify and enhance properties of live cells. In turn, cells may serve as sacrificial templates to fabricate cell-mimicking materials. Herein we report a facile method to produce cell-recognising silica imprints capable of the selective detection of human cells. We used HeLa cells to template silica inorganic shells doped with halloysite clay nanotubes. The shells were destroyed by sonication resulting in the formation of polydisperse hybrid imprints that were used to recognise HeLa cells in liquid media supplemented with yeast. We believe that methodology reported here will find applications in biomedical and clinical research.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1