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Quantitative intracellular retention of delivered RNAs through optimized cell fixation and immuno-staining

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Abstract

Abstract Detection of nucleic acids within sub-cellular compartments is key to understanding their function. Determining the intracellular distribution of nucleic acids requires quantitative retention and estimation of their association with different organelles by immunofluorescence microscopy. This is important also for the delivery of nucleic acid therapeutics which depends on endocytic uptake and endosomal escape. However, the current methods fail to preserve the majority of exogenously delivered nucleic acids in the cytoplasm. To solve this problem, by monitoring Cy5-labeled mRNA delivered to primary human adipocytes via lipid nanoparticles (LNP), we optimized cell fixation, permeabilization and immuno-staining of a number of organelle markers, achieving quantitative retention of mRNA and allowing visualization of levels which escape detection using conventional procedures. Additionally, we demonstrated the protocol to be effective on exogenously delivered siRNA, miRNA, as well as endogenous miRNA. Our protocol is compatible with RNA probes of single molecule fluorescence in-situ hybridization (smFISH) and molecular beacon, thus demonstrating that it is broadly applicable to study a variety of nucleic acids.

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