Abstract
Endocytosis is a critical step in the process by which many therapeutic nanomedicines reach their intracellular targets. Our understanding of cellular uptake mechanisms has developed substantially in the past five years. However, these advances in cell biology have not fully translated to the nanoscience and therapeutics literature. Misconceptions surrounding the role of different endocytic pathways and how to study these pathways are hindering progress in developing improved nanoparticle therapies. Here, we summarize the latest insights into cellular uptake mechanisms and pathways. We highlight limitations of current systems to study endocytosis, particularly problems with non-specific inhibitors. We also summarize alternative genetic approaches to robustly probe these pathways and discuss the need to understand how cells endocytose particles in vivo. We hope that this critical assessment of the current methods used in studying nanoparticle uptake will guide future studies at the interface of cell biology and nanomedicine.
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Main
Engineering nanoparticles to deliver drugs has the potential to improve cancer therapy, vaccination and treatment of genetic disorders. The key advantages of nanoparticle delivery lie in the potential to reduce side effects by targeting specific cells, protecting delicate therapeutics from premature degradation, improving the solubility of hard-to-deliver drugs and providing sustained and controlled release of drugs. While a number of barriers must be overcome to achieve targeted nanoparticle drug delivery, ultimately in most cases the ability for a drug to have a therapeutic effect at its site of action is governed by the capacity of the nanoparticle to enter the cell.
Internalization pathways are not ubiquitous. Phagocytosis and macropinocytosis, for example, may not be a feature of all cell types. However, it is less well recognized that other commonly studied internalization pathways are also limited to certain cells. When investigating nanoparticle uptake, it is crucial to understand if the pathways being studied are actually present in the cells. Determining the mechanism of uptake can give important information about efficiency of delivery, therapeutic activity and translation to other cells or in vivo studies. However, reporting an uptake mechanism for the sake of it and without reference to the biological relevance adds little to our knowledge.
There are two main routes of entry into the cell: direct fusion with the plasma membrane or endocytosis. Direct fusion to the plasma membrane is exploited by some encapsulated viruses1, and a number of interesting nanoparticle systems have been engineered to exploit this pathway2,3. However, the principal route of entry of nanoparticles into the cell is via endocytosis. The importance of understanding endocytosis is highlighted by the effect nanoparticle targeting has on tumour regression. In vivo targeting of nanoparticles to tumours typically results in <1% of the total dose accumulating at the tumour site4. However, compared with non-targeted nanoparticles, the tumour regression for targeted systems is substantially greater than the increased accumulation. This suggests that uptake of nanoparticles by tumour cells is the driving force behind the increased activity of targeted nanoparticles. Understanding endocytosis is also important for engineered nanoparticles that can avoid clearance by the mononuclear phagocytic system (MPS)5, phagocytic immune cells that form the first line of defence in the body against foreign invaders. A major hindrance to nanoparticle therapies is the rapid clearance of nanoparticles by the MPS, which results in accumulation in the liver and spleen. This accumulation results in a loss of active therapeutic from the circulation and can result in significant toxic side effects if the nanoparticle carries a cytotoxic payload. A critical step in avoiding clearance by the MPS is avoiding nanoparticle uptake by these cells.
An understanding of endocytosis can also benefit the development of different types of therapeutic strategy, independent of nanoparticle uptake. For example, a recent study demonstrated that the antitumour effects of anti-EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) antibodies can be potentiated by inhibition of specific endocytic pathways, leading to enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity mediated by natural killer cells6.
The role of endocytosis is also important for naturally occurring nanoparticles, such as viruses and exosomes. The rise of viruses such as SARS-CoV-2 highlights the importance of understanding uptake mechanisms, as this understanding can help to inform potential antiviral treatments. Exosome signalling plays an important role in normal growth and development, but also plays a key role in the progression of diseases such as cancer. Exosomes can also be exploited for their therapeutic potential, and are currently being used for short interfering RNA (siRNA), protein and small-molecule drug delivery7. As with synthetic nanoparticles, the ability of exosomes to carry out these functions is governed by the ability of a target cell to internalize the exosome and its cargo.
While cellular uptake plays a critical role in the efficiency of therapeutic delivery, the analysis of internalization is often hampered by an outdated understanding of the mechanisms that drive cellular uptake. In this Review we will highlight the latest advances in our understanding of the cellular mechanisms of internalization and critically assess the current techniques that can be used to determine the pathways involved. We also provide guidelines for future experiments assessing nanoparticle uptake (Box 1).
Pathways of endocytosis
Understanding the mechanisms by which nanoparticles can be internalized into cells is important for a number of reasons. First, the physical properties (for example size) of the nanoparticles govern the mechanisms that are able to mediate the uptake of the particle. Second, the rate of nanoparticle uptake is largely dependent on the internalization mechanism. Finally, not all cells possess the same internalization machinery; therefore, understanding the mechanisms of uptake can inform which cells will be likely to internalize nanoparticles that are engineered to target specific pathways. A poor understanding of internalization mechanisms can lead to poorly engineered nanoparticles that have suboptimal therapeutic performance and can lead to unexpected results when studying nanoparticles with different cell lines, or when translating nanoparticles from in vitro to in vivo studies. The same nanoparticle may also be internalized by different mechanisms in different cell types8,9, again emphasizing the need to understand endocytic pathways in the model cell studied in culture and within the target cells of interest in vivo.
Before considering the relevance of different endocytic pathways for nanoparticles to enter the cell and reach their intracellular targets, a brief summary of the current view of endocytosis is required. This is particularly important in view of recent major developments in our understanding of the endocytic pathways in vertebrate cells, particularly those that do not use clathrin. For more extensive reviews of this area the reader is referred to recent articles10,11.
A consensus is now developing for five major types of endocytosis: (1) clathrin-coated pit-mediated endocytosis (CME; clathrin and dynamin dependent), (2) fast endophilin-mediated endocytosis (FEME, a clathrin-independent but dynamin-dependent pathway for rapid ligand-driven endocytosis of specific membrane proteins), (3) clathrin-independent carrier (CLIC)/glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein enriched early endocytic compartment (GEEC) endocytosis (clathrin and dynamin independent), (4) macropinocytosis and (5) phagocytosis (Fig. 1 and Box 2). Caveolae represent a sixth pathway, which in theory can also contribute to endocytic uptake. While caveolae can bud from the plasma membrane, few if any cargoes are dependent on caveolae for their uptake12 and endocytosis by the FEME and CLIC/GEEC pathways may be confused with the caveola pathway due to poor specificity of endocytosis inhibitors (Tools to study mechanisms of uptake and Table 1).
These endocytic pathways will be briefly considered here as a framework for understanding the uptake of nanoparticles. Model cargoes for each pathway are highlighted, but no cargo is shown for the caveolin pathway due to the limited evidence of protein cargo that is specifically internalized by this pathway. A common feature of these pathways is that the majority of cargoes they internalize are trafficked to the early endosome. Cargo can be recycled back to the cell surface or onwards to the late endosome and subsequently to the lysosome. It should also be appreciated that we are presenting a simplified view of the pathways as a working model for classifying and defining the different endocytic mechanisms. The study of endocytosis is an actively evolving field, so it is important for nanomaterial researchers to remain up to date with the latest advances in cellular understanding. Clathrin, for example, is a defining feature of CME but can also be involved in the uptake of large particles through a mechanism that is distinct from the classical CME pathway. Boundaries between CLIC/GEEC endocytosis and macropinocytosis can also be unclear, and the two pathways may share common components13. There is also clearly cross-talk between pathways: for example, perturbation of the levels of caveolar components can affect the CLIC/GEEC pathway14. Finally, inhibition of one pathway can modulate another and so compensate for the lack of that pathway. For example, inhibition of dynamin using a temperature-sensitive mutant causes rapid upregulation of dynamin-independent endocytosis15. This is a crucial consideration in studies using inhibitors of specific pathways to define uptake mechanisms and emphasizes the need for multiple techniques.
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis, CME
The clathrin-dependent pathway of endocytosis is the best understood endocytic route. It occurs in all mammalian cells and is the principal route for cells to obtain nutrients, for example facilitating the uptake of iron (via transferrin) and cholesterol (via low-density lipoproteins). CME is sometimes referred to as receptor-mediated endocytosis; however, this term is outdated and misleading, as clathrin-independent internalization mechanisms can also involve specific receptor–ligand interactions (for example the FEME pathway)16. Clathrin-coated pits occupy 0.5–2% of the cell surface17. Receptor clustering or phosphorylation within the cytoplasmic domain of surface membrane proteins recruits adaptin proteins and initiates a cascade of low-affinity protein–protein and protein–lipid interactions (particularly with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P2)), which lead to the formation of a clathrin-coated pit. This is a highly dynamic and cooperative system in which a multitude of interactions form a pit within 30–120 s of ligand binding18. The pit rapidly invaginates to form a clathrin-coated vesicle, which pinches off the plasma membrane through the activity of dynamin, a large mechanical GTPase. Clathrin-coated vesicles have an average diameter of ~100 nm (ref. 18), representing the upper size limit of nanoparticles that can be internalized via this pathway.
Bacteria and large particles up to 1 µm in diameter have been shown to co-opt clathrin and form actin-rich pedestals to facilitate their uptake19. It has also been proposed that rod-like viruses and nanoparticles, longer than the diameter of the typical clathrin-coated vesicle, can be internalized by CME through the actin elongation of the clathrin-coated pit20. The requirement for actin recruitment can slow the endocytic process, leading to altered internalization kinetics compared with conventional CME.
The distinct morphology of the clathrin-coated pit, systems to effectively and specifically perturb the pathway, and well characterized cargoes that are completely dependent on this pathway for uptake have facilitated the extensive characterization of this ubiquitous and constitutive pathway.
Clathrin-independent/dynamin-dependent endocytosis, FEME
FEME has recently emerged as an important pathway for rapid endocytosis of specific transmembrane receptors, important in growth factor signalling and in cell migration16. Cargoes for FEME include G-protein-coupled receptors, such as β1-adrenergic, dopaminergic and acetylcholine receptors, as well as the IL-2 receptor and growth factor receptors (EGFR, hepatocyte growth factor receptor (HGFR)).
The FEME pathway has a number of unique features that distinguish it from other pathways. First, the pathway is clathrin independent but dynamin dependent. Second, the formation of endocytic carriers is induced upon ligand binding to specific receptors. FEME relies on interactions between the SH3 domain of endophilin and cognate receptors (for example G-protein-coupled receptors) or indirect association through intermediate proteins such as CIN85 and Cbl (for EGFR and HGFR). These interactions stabilize endophilin localized to the leading edge of migrating cells through the PtdIns(3,4)P2-binding protein lamellipodin. Formation of FEME carriers is extremely rapid (<10 s), is dependent on pre-enrichment of endophilin at the membrane and leads to the formation of tubular carriers, which are 60–80 nm in diameter and several hundred nanometres in length16.
Clathrin-independent/dynamin-independent endocytosis, CLIC/GEEC
CLICs are involved in a distinct endocytic pathway, independent of dynamin or clathrin, which has been shown to be a high-capacity pathway in mammalian cultured cells and is also conserved in Drosophila21,22. This pathway, termed CLIC/GEEC endocytosis, shares some features with the FEME pathway, as they both localize to the leading edge of migrating cells and involve tubular and ring-shaped pleomorphic carriers (ranging in diameter and length). However unlike FEME, which is stimulated by specific ligand–receptor interactions, CLIC/GEEC endocytosis is a constitutive pathway (that is, it continuously occurs in the cells that possess the pathway) that mediates the uptake of cargoes that are different from those using the FEME pathway16. Notably, this pathway is involved in the uptake of abundant surface proteins such as the hyaluronic acid receptor (CD44) and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins, and in some cells also mediates the uptake of substantial amounts of fluid and membrane. Using a real-time fluorescence assay and total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to follow the early steps in this pathway, it was shown that there is minimal concentration of cargo proteins (glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins) in the forming carriers before endocytosis23. This feature of the pathway has made its study difficult in comparison with FEME and CME, where clustering of cargo in the forming carrier makes for more straightforward observation by fluorescence microscopy. The CLICs mature into tubular GEECs. The pathway is regulated by ARF1/GBF1, the actin regulatory complex Arp2/3 and the small GTPase Cdc42, and is associated with a specific BAR domain protein, IRSp53, as well as GRAF1 (ref. 23). In addition to this cytoplasmic machinery, a novel extracellular mechanism has been proposed for the uptake of specific CLIC/GEEC markers24. This process involves extracellular lectins called galectins that cluster glycosylated proteins and glycosphingolipids into nanoscale domains that then invaginate inwards to generate the tubular carrier. A similar mechanism is exploited by infectious agents such as the SV40 virus, cholera and Shiga toxins to enter the CLIC/GEEC endocytosis pathway (although note that these toxins are associated with a number of other endocytic pathways including FEME, CME and caveolae)25. This mechanism is dependent on the multivalent nature of the galectin, which is secreted extracellularly in large quantities, and the coordinated interaction of the galectin with lipids and proteins, such as CD44 and integrins24. The pathway is particularly sensitive to changes in membrane tension and has been shown to be crucial for homoeostatic regulation of plasma membrane tension through the mechanotransducer protein vinculin26.
Macropinocytosis
Macropinosomes form by the actin-driven extension of plasma membrane sheets followed by enclosure of large volumes of the extracellular medium as the macropinosome folds back. The mechanisms involved in this process have been elegantly described in macrophages using lattice light sheet microscopy and have demonstrated the formation of tentpole-like actin extensions with sheets of membrane between27. Twisting of the ‘tentpoles’ causes the trapping of fluid at the base of the structure. After closure, the macropinosome undergoes a transformation as membrane tubules form and detach to recycle out membrane while the remaining vacuole shrinks. The macropinosome undergoes interactions with other compartments to acquire the characteristics of an early endosomal compartment.
The capacity for cells to macropinocytose material is highly dependent on the cell type and can be a constitutive or an induced process28. Macrophages and dendritic cells exhibit high levels of constitutive macropinocytosis to sample the extracellular environment for pathogens29. Induction of macropinocytosis can occur through a range of stimuli, including receptor tyrosine kinase family receptors (for example EGFR), proteoglycans or G-protein-coupled receptors. Neutrophils have been shown to induce macropinocytosis in response to viral infections, and dendritic cells upregulate their native levels of macropinocytosis in response to treatment with lipopolysaccharide30.
In transformed cells with a RAS mutation, macropinocytosis plays a crucial role in uptake of protein to be used as a source of amino acids for fuel31. It has also been shown that breast and prostate cancer cells use macropinocytosis to increase trafficking of ErbB3 into the nucleus to promote proliferation32. Constitutive macropinocytosis levels vary in different cell lines in culture and undoubtedly also in different cells in vivo. Macropinocytosis can also be stimulated by growth factors in culture medium33. These factors make it important to ascertain the role of macropinocytosis in the target cells in vivo.
Phagocytosis
Phagocytosis involves the uptake of particulate material by professional phagocytes (polymorphonuclear neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages) and non-professional phagocytes34,35. This has been considered to involve the uptake of particles over 0.5 µm in diameter, but the lower limits for phagocytic uptake are actually unclear and phagocytosis could be involved in the uptake of far smaller particles, including nanoparticles36. Phagocytosis is a crucial cellular process for uptake of cellular debris, including dead cells, and for the elimination of pathogenic microorganisms by cells of the innate immune system. Particles or microorganisms are engulfed by a tight-fitting membrane that extends around the particle until it is completely enclosed and scission from the plasma membrane occurs. The resultant intracellular vacuole, the early phagosome, matures into a degradative compartment containing a full complement of microbiocidal agents.
Phagocytosis is initiated by binding of particles to surface proteins such as scavenger receptors, which can recognize a diverse range of materials35, or by specific receptor interactions. The uptake of pathogens by macrophages is one of the best understood phagocytic processes. Clustering of surface receptors that recognize opsonized particles via their associated immunoglobulins activates Src family kinases. Sustained activation requires exclusion of key phosphatases, such as CD45 and CD148, from the site of phagocytosis. This process depends on the close apposition of the macrophage’s enclosing phagosomal membrane and coordination with actin and integrin signalling networks. This signalling network strengthens the association of the phagosomal cup membrane with the phagocytosed particle, while the exclusion of CD45 and CD148 phosphatases accelerates the expansion of the phagocytic cup. Membrane extension and phagosome formation rely on the actin cytoskeleton, with actin filaments depolymerizing at the base of the cup and polymerizing at the tips of the lamellae as they extend over the particle. This relies on a series of small GTPases including Cdc42, Rac and RhoA working together with effectors such as WASP and Arp2/3 to generate a branched actin network. Actin remodelling also relies on transient changes in membrane lipids such as the consumption of PtdIns(4,5)P2, through both hydrolysis and conversion to PtdIns(3,4,5)P3. Phagocytic cup extension also requires dynamin-2, which regulates both actin dynamics and scission from the plasma membrane; however, the mechanism of action is probably different from other internalization mechanisms37.
Once the phagosome forms, a series of complex maturation events occurs as the phagosome fuses with endosomal compartments and acquires the characteristics of a late-endosomal/lysosomal compartment. These maturation steps involve a series of complex membrane trafficking steps, including sequential acquisition of Rab GTPases, microtubule-dependent trafficking through dynein/dynactin, recruitment of elements of the autophagosomal machinery and selective retrieval of membrane-associated components from the forming phagolysosomes38.
Caveolae: limited evidence for nanoparticle uptake
An extensive literature links caveolae to endocytosis. This includes decades of work in vascular endothelia, in which caveolae have been proposed to mediate transcellular transport from the lumen of vessels across the endothelium and into tissues. In non-endothelial cells, caveolae have also been implicated in a number of endocytic processes including uptake of toxins, viruses, whole bacteria, lipids and a range of nanoparticles. Each of these pathways remains somewhat controversial, particularly as studies using genetic knockout of caveolar components have not generally shown a dependence on caveolae for endocytic uptake in any system12,39. For example, mice lacking caveolae show efficient transport of albumin from the bloodstream to tissues40, while viruses and toxins shown to associate with caveolae are not dependent on caveolae for their infectious entry and toxicity41. A set of criteria that can be used to assess uptake via caveolae has been discussed elsewhere42.
Caveolae are characterized by a unique morphology as seen by electron microscopy: a bulb-shaped pit of approximately 60 nm diameter connected to the plasma membrane by a slightly smaller neck43. Caveolae are very abundant in some cell types but absent from others (for example neurons and many blood cells). Many commonly used mammalian cell lines also lack caveolae, including PC3 cells and at least some MCF7 strains (Box 3). This cell- and tissue-specific distribution is very different from clathrin-coated pits, which show a fairly constant density in different cell types. Caveolae are generated by caveolins and cavins working together with accessory proteins such as Eps15 homology domain-containing 2 (EHD2), pacsin/syndapins and ROR1 (ref. 12). Cavins are peripheral membrane proteins that associate primarily with caveolae under steady-state conditions. However, caveolins are integral membrane proteins that associate with a number of cellular compartments, including caveolae, endosomes, the Golgi complex and lipid droplets. This wide distribution of caveolins has led in part to confusion over the role of caveolins in endocytic pathways. Loss of caveolae occurs when the expression of caveolin-1 (CAV1; in non-muscle cells), caveolin-3 (CAV3; striated muscle cells) or cavin1 (in both muscle and non-muscle cells) is ablated. This provides a way to test whether uptake of specific markers is dependent on caveolae.
The role of caveolae in endocytic processes, as endocytic carriers analogous to clathrin-coated pits, is not clear despite the dogma that has developed in some research fields. A number of factors have added confusion to the field. First, a number of studies have relied on inhibitors to test for the involvement of caveolae. Invariably these inhibitors have insufficient specificity to prove the involvement of caveolae (Table 1). For example, cholesterol perturbation not only disrupts caveolae but also perturbs CLIC/GEEC endocytosis and FEME, even under conditions where transferrin uptake via clathrin-coated pits is unaffected14,16,41,44. Second, colocalization with caveolin has been considered an indicator of caveolar endocytosis. In fact, overexpression of caveolin-1 leads to its association with a number of endocytic pathways and compartments, as the levels of endogenous cavin limit caveolar formation. An example of this is the proposed association of caveolin-1 with a novel compartment called the caveosome45, subsequently proposed by the original authors to be an artefact of caveolin-1 overexpression46. Experiments using fluorescently tagged caveolin-1 must also be performed with care in view of studies proposing that both amino- and carboxy-terminal-tagged proteins can act as dominant-negative inhibitors45.
Another important aspect of studies proposing involvement of caveolae is whether the particle or agent of interest can be physically accommodated within a caveola. The interior of caveolae, around 50 nm in diameter, can only accommodate relatively small cargo. Large cargo, such as bacteria47 and larger nanoparticles48, have been proposed to use caveolae, but it is not clear how the caveola structure could accommodate materials greater than the diameter of this pathway. The structure of vesicles to accommodate these particles would need to be dramatically modified and so they should not be considered caveolae. However, caveolar proteins could still be hijacked to facilitate the internalization process. We suggest that if such mechanisms are proven they should be very clearly differentiated from bona fide caveolar endocytosis, which should be confined to budding of intact caveolae with cargo.
In conclusion, without further evidence, it is difficult to establish whether any nanoparticles require caveolae for endocytosis, at least in non-endothelial cells. Use of genetically modified cells and organisms should be able to resolve many of these issues in the future (Table 2).
Nanoparticle uptake: general considerations
Many notable studies investigating nanoparticle size, shape, charge and targeting were performed before we fully understood the roles of the CLIC/GEEC and FEME pathways. Furthermore, recent advances in our understanding of how pharmacological inhibitors interact with multiple endocytosis pathways also calls for us to reassess the properties that govern endocytosis49. The pathways of CME, FEME, CLIC/GEEC and caveolae are all associated with carriers with a diameter smaller than 200 nm, which means it is unlikely that particles larger than 200 nm can be internalized by these routes. Particles larger than 200 nm will typically be internalized by macropinocytosis or phagocytosis (but note that proteins such as clathrin and dynamin can still play a crucial role in these pathways)50,51. Reports that particles larger than 200 nm are endocytosed by caveolae conflict with our current understanding of the caveola structure48. Below 100 nm, the size of the nanoparticle plays a less important role in possible routes of uptake, as the geometry of each pathway can readily accommodate small nanoparticles.
When nanoparticles are placed in cell media or are injected in vivo, serum proteins quickly adsorb to the surface of the nanoparticle, forming a protein corona. These adsorbed proteins, such as vitronectin, can induce binding to specific cell surface receptors, which in turn can influence the uptake pathway52. The formation of a protein corona can also cause particles to aggregate before they reach the cell, causing the effective nanoparticle size to be significantly larger than the size measured ex vivo in water or PBS. We have recently helped to draft the MIRIBEL standard for reporting the properties of nanoparticles, and feel that reporting the full characterization of these materials will help with the comparison of different studies53.
Tools to study mechanisms of uptake
A considerable research effort has been, and is still being, expended on understanding the pathways by which nanoparticles are internalized9. Many of these studies employ inhibitors, and particularly in the nanoparticle literature many rely solely on the use of inhibitors and cell culture models. A pertinent question is whether these studies have helped the field to progress, and in particular whether their use helps in the design and application of new therapeutics (here we are not discussing the use of endocytosis inhibitors themselves as therapeutic agents, something that has considerable potential)6.
Aside from the question of the importance of dissecting the pathways of endocytosis of nanoparticles in cultured cells, a crucial question is how specific these inhibitors are. Many inhibitors considered specific for macropinocytosis also inhibit FEME (Table 1). In fact, in one study all tested inhibitors of macropinocytosis and clathrin-independent endocytosis also inhibited FEME16. A number of inhibitors of clathrin-coated pit endocytosis also inhibit FEME, including chlorpromazine and potassium depletion, whereas cholesterol depletion to inhibit uptake via caveolae also inhibits the CLIC/GEEC and FEME pathways.
The non-specific and cross-reactive nature of these inhibitors means that it is important to confirm the activity of the inhibitors54. This can be achieved using markers that have been extensively validated to be specifically internalized by particular pathways (Box 1). Use of these markers not only confirms the activity of the inhibitor but can also give information about non-specific inhibition.
The methods used to study endocytosis are also important. The uptake of nanoparticles into cells is typically investigated by fluorescently labelling materials and measuring uptake using fluorescence microscopy or flow cytometry. One challenge is accurately distinguishing material bound to the plasma membrane from internalized material55. Confocal microscopy offers a low-throughput technique to qualitatively determine if nanoparticles are inside the cell; however, it can be difficult to distinguish between material that is internalized, but close to the cell surface, and material bound to the outer plasma membrane. Flow cytometry is a high-throughput method for rapidly quantifying the association of material with cells; however, by default flow cytometry quantifies total association, rather than distinguishing internalized material from surface-bound material. Recently a number of new techniques have been developed that allow rapid quantification of uptake using flow cytometry56,57. The specific techniques to quantify uptake are beyond the scope of this Review; however, we have recently reviewed the latest advances in quantifying cellular uptake elsewhere58. A common technique to synchronize internalization and normalize nanoparticle binding is to initially incubate nanoparticles with cells at 4 °C to inhibit uptake. Unbound particles are then washed away and the cells returned to 37 °C to initiate uptake. The synchronized internalization allows for easy interpretation of internalization kinetics. However, CLIC/GEEC endocytosis has been reported to recover slowly after a low-temperature incubation while clathrin-dependent endocytosis recovers rapidly10. This has the potential to underrepresent the importance of CLIC/GEEC pathway and overestimate the importance of CME if a low-temperature protocol is used. To visualize the FEME pathway it is important that the cells are fixed at 37 °C, which suggests that temperature may also influence this pathway16. Furthermore, a number of endocytosis inhibitors require serum-free media; however, it has been established that serum stimulates FEME but not CLIC/GEEC endocytosis, while serum starvation downregulates FEME16,21. Consequently, decoupling the role of FEME from other pathways using small-molecule inhibitors can be challenging. Increasingly researchers are employing incubation at 37 °C with no cooling step and a serum-containing medium to minimize these problems.
Knockout of key components in the internalization pathways, or expression of dominant-negative inhibitors, if performed carefully with appropriate controls, can overcome these problems (Table 2; although note that these inhibitors can also have off-target effects because some components can be shared by different pathways or can influence these pathways)13. These include the expression of the BAR domain of endophilin lacking its N-terminal amphipathic helix (b) for the FEME pathway, caveolin-1 or cavin1 knockout for the caveolar pathway, and the use of dynamin-knockout cells in which all three isoforms are genetically ablated or can be conditionally downregulated. RNA interference is a valuable tool to achieve knockdown of these key proteins and has been used to interrogate the role of different endocytic pathways in the endocytosis of nanomaterials8. siRNA can also be used to screen numerous proteins either individually or in concert to assess their implications in different endocytic pathways59,60. Although this approach is likely to be more specific than pharmacological inhibitors, the highly intricate nature of these endocytic pathways, which may share protein components (an aspect that may not be well understood currently), means that validation is critical to avoid affecting multiple pathways. siRNA-mediated knockdown can also suffer from off-target effects.
Fate
For delivery of therapeutic nanoparticles, internalization is only the first step. The subsequent trafficking substantially impacts the efficacy of the delivery system. For delivery of the therapeutic to its site of action, typically in the cytosol or nucleus, a number of questions arise. First, does the endocytic pathway matter? Second, can we specifically exploit the distinct characteristics of specific pathways to benefit drug or nanoparticle uptake and trafficking? Third, what do we know about these pathways in vivo? Surprisingly, in view of the importance of the question and the number of research papers devoted to nanoparticle or drug delivery, the answer to this last question is that very little is known. These questions will be addressed in turn.
There is strong evidence to suggest that all major endocytosis pathways are capable of delivering their contents to the early endosome through a Rab5/EEA1-dependent trafficking pathway61. From the early endosome, cargo can be recycled back to the cell surface either directly or via the Rab11-positive recycling endosome, or can remain with the vacuolar portion of the early endosome as it converts to a late-endosomal compartment and is eventually trafficked to the lysosomes. The majority of studies investigating the fate of nanoparticles and their cargo show substantial accumulation in the lysosomes.
In addition to the classical pathway of uptake to the EEA1-positive early endosome, internalized cargo in clathrin-coated vesicles is also delivered to the APPL1-positive early endosome, a parallel stable sorting compartment62,63. This compartment may be not an essential station for bulk endocytic cargo but rather a signalling compartment62. Traffic to the APPL endosome may delay transport into the EAA1 endosome, where recycling or degradation could occur to allow prolonged signalling.
It is important to note that cargo endocytosed by the same mechanism can be sorted into different endosomal compartments, and that cargo endocytosed by different mechanisms can be sorted into the same endosomal compartment. CD44, CD98, CD147 and MHCI enter cells via a clathrin-independent pathway, and colocalize to the same endocytic vesicles after 5 min (ref. 64). However, CD44, CD98 and CD147 are rapidly sorted in a different way from MHCI into EEA1-negative endosomal compartments and avoid the degradative lysosomal pathway. This altered trafficking is controlled by sequences in the cytoplasmic domain of the receptors65. It has yet to be tested whether this distinct trafficking route can influence the fate of nanoparticles.
The fate of nanoparticles can be driven by a number of factors that relate to the mechanism of internalization. These include the rate of internalization, the percentage of material internalized and signalling on the cytosolic side of the internalized receptor. There is some evidence to suggest that certain internalization pathways can influence subsequent cellular trafficking; however, it is not clear if it is the internalization pathway or signalling from the receptor that is the major driver of this trafficking. As an example of differential trafficking, liposomes with high surface densities of octa-arginine have been shown to increase macropinocytosis, and had higher transfection efficiencies than lower-density octa-arginine liposomes, which were internalized by other pathways66.
The delivery requirements of small-molecule drugs and large macromolecules such as proteins or RNA/DNA are quite different. Small-molecule drugs are generally synthesized such that their properties allow the passive diffusion across cell membranes. Therefore, simply achieving accumulation in a target tissue without regard for the subsequent internalization mechanism may be sufficient to attain enhanced drug delivery to a specific subset of cells. Comparatively large macromolecules are unable to passively diffuse across these membranes due to their size and polarity, and therefore rely on endosomal escape to reach sites of action within the cytosol or nucleus67. It remains to be seen whether endosomal escape is dependent on the trafficking route within which the internalized material finds itself. If certain trafficking vesicles result in increased endosomal escape (perhaps due to specific lipid content)68, it may be possible to target specific endocytic compartments to control the therapeutics’ fate and enhance cytosolic delivery. Methods to understand endosomal escape and engineer nanoparticles to promote cytosolic delivery have been reviewed recently67,69,70, and are beyond the scope of this Review.
Endocytic pathways in vivo
We have highlighted the variation in endocytic pathways in different commonly used laboratory cell lines. It is clear that there will be even more variation in endocytosis between different cell types in vivo, reflecting the particular properties of these cells, their physiological functions and the ever changing local environment of cells in different tissues within a whole organism. The organization of the endosomal circuits differs between cell types in vivo71, and particular cell types, such as cells of the kidney proximal tubules, have evolved high-capacity internalization mechanisms. Even cells of the same type grown in culture under different conditions can dramatically remodel their endocytic pathways as they change from a dividing to a quiescent state72, and so it is not surprising that the few studies that have compared endocytosis by cells in culture with their in vivo counterparts have shown notable differences in endocytic pathways73. Very little is still known of the magnitude of different endocytic pathways in physiological cell types in different tissues and how these differences impact on the delivery of nanoparticles into the cells of interest in vivo. However, the application of intravital subcellular microscopy, including the use of light microscopy techniques such as spinning-disc, confocal and multiphoton microscopy in live animals, is now starting to provide new insights into the uptake of biological and therapeutic agents in vivo74,75,76. Another important aspect of delivery in vivo, which lies outside the scope of this Review, is transport from the bloodstream across the endothelium to the target cells, and the reader is referred to a recent review on this subject77. A crucial future aim must be to develop tractable systems that go beyond the culture dish and into more physiological systems.
Conclusion
Nanoparticle delivery systems have the potential to improve the treatment of various diseases. Understanding how these nanoparticles are internalized by cells and then processed within the cells is critical for understanding how nanoparticles can reach their site of action. Here we present an overview of the current understanding of endocytosis, and the limitations of current experimental techniques, in the hope of stimulating research directed at understanding how a nanoparticle is internalized in target cells in vivo, and how an understanding of this process can dictate therapeutic strategies. Increased understanding of the process can potentially help harness cell biological mechanisms for more efficient delivery. Whether we can actually modulate the endocytic process to favour therapeutic delivery via a productive pathway is still unclear, although modulation of endocytosis in the clinic is now becoming a real possibility. Simple analysis of nanoparticle uptake mechanisms through the use of one or two non-specific pharmaceutical inhibitors adds little knowledge to our understanding of nanoparticle–cell interactions. It is important to recognize that most endocytosis inhibitors are working on multiple pathways (Table 1), which makes it difficult to draw definitive conclusions about the endocytic pathways. Instead, genetic knockouts or dominant-negative proteins may provide a more specific approach to understand uptake. There are a number of conflicting reports in the literature that conclude specific endocytic pathways without using the most up-to-date tools and knowledge. Compounding this, a number of commonly reported pathways are not ubiquitous to all cells.
Aspects of nanoparticle design, such as size, shape and surface chemistry, are thought to influence the route of internalization. However, many of these studies were performed before we developed our current understanding of endocytosis mechanisms, and it is important to re-evaluate them with the most up-to-date understanding.
While cell culture systems are vital for elucidating the fundamental mechanisms, molecules and pathways of endocytosis, it is important to understand their limitations. In vitro studies help answer specific questions about the pathways being studied, but they do not answer the wider question of whether these mechanisms are relevant in vivo. We see use of systems that more faithfully reflect the in vivo environment as vital. Ultimately this might require the use of whole-animal systems and development of new tools to study these in vivo. This does not mean that cell culture studies are not valid; rather, it means that in vitro studies should be informed by in vivo evidence. The use of intermediate systems such as explants or organoids, in which endocytosis can be manipulated in vitro, might be an excellent intermediate step in characterization. The study of EGFR endocytosis in live ex vivo human tumour biopsies represents an interesting step in this direction6,78. Creating nanoparticle systems with this in mind will aid the development and testing of delivery systems in a rational scientific fashion and most importantly should improve the efficacy of nanoparticles in therapeutic applications.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (Centre of Excellence in Convergent Bio-Nano Science and Technology CE140100036—A.P.R.J. and R.G.P.) and National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Fellowships (A.P.R.J., APP1141551, R.G.P., APP1156489). J.J.R. was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. We are grateful to G. Griffiths, E. Boucrot and F. Simpson for insightful comments and thank the members of the Parton and Johnston groups and Centre of Excellence collaborators for discussion.
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Rennick, J.J., Johnston, A.P.R. & Parton, R.G. Key principles and methods for studying the endocytosis of biological and nanoparticle therapeutics. Nat. Nanotechnol. 16, 266–276 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-021-00858-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-021-00858-8
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