| Literature DB >> 18989862 |
Orestis Faklaris1, Damien Garrot, Vandana Joshi, Frédéric Druon, Jean-Paul Boudou, Thierry Sauvage, Patrick Georges, Patrick A Curmi, François Treussart.
Abstract
Diamond nanoparticles are promising photoluminescent probes for tracking intracellular processes, due to embedded, perfectly photostable color centers. In this work, the spontaneous internalization of such nanoparticles (diameter 25 nm) in HeLa cancer cells is investigated by confocal microscopy and time-resolved techniques. Nanoparticles are observed inside the cell cytoplasm at the single-particle and single-color-center level, assessed by time-correlation intensity measurements. Improvement of the nanoparticle signal-to-noise ratio inside the cell is achieved using a pulsed-excitation laser and time-resolved detection taking advantage of the long radiative lifetime of the color-center excited state as compared to cell autofluorescence. The internalization pathways are also investigated, with endosomal marking and colocalization analyses. The low colocalization ratio observed proves that nanodiamonds are not trapped in endosomes, a promising result in prospect of drug delivery by these nanoparticles. Low cytotoxicity of these nanoparticles in this cell line is also shown.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18989862 DOI: 10.1002/smll.200800655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281