Literature DB >> 22732239

The gold standard: gold nanoparticle libraries to understand the nano-bio interface.

Alaaldin M Alkilany1, Samuel E Lohse, Catherine J Murphy.   

Abstract

Since the late 1980s, researchers have prepared inorganic nanoparticles of many types--including elemental metals, metal oxides, metal sulfides, metal selenides, and metal tellurides--with excellent control over size and shape. Originally many researchers were primarily interested in exploring the quantum size effects predicted for such materials. Applications of inorganic nanomaterials initially centered on physics, optics, and engineering but have expanded to include biology. Many current nanomaterials can serve as biochemical sensors, contrast agents in cellular or tissue imaging, drug delivery vehicles, or even as therapeutics. In this Account we emphasize that the understanding of how nanomaterials will function in a biological system relies on the knowledge of the interface between biological systems and nanomaterials, the nano-bio interface. Gold nanoparticles can serve as excellent standards to understand more general features of the nano-bio interface because of its many advantages over other inorganic materials. The bulk material is chemically inert, and well-established synthetic methods allow researchers to control its size, shape, and surface chemistry. Gold's background concentration in biological systems is low, which makes it relatively easy to measure it at the part-per-billion level or lower in water. In addition, the large electron density of gold enables relatively simple electron microscopic experiments to localize it within thin sections of cells or tissue. Finally, gold's brilliant optical properties at the nanoscale are tunable with size, shape, and aggregation state and enable many of the promising chemical sensing, imaging, and therapeutic applications. Basic experiments with gold nanoparticles and cells include measuring the toxicity of the particles to cells in in vitro experiments. The species other than gold in the nanoparticle solution can be responsible for the apparent toxicity at a particular dose. Once the identity of the toxic agent in nanoparticle solutions is known, researchers can employ strategies to mitigate toxicity. For example, the surfactant used at high concentration in the synthesis (0.1 M) of gold nanorods remains on their surface in the form of a bilayer and can be toxic to certain cells at 200 nM concentrations. Several strategies can alleviate the toxic response. Polyelectrolyte layer-by-layer wrapping can cover up the surfactant bilayer, or researchers can exchange the surfactant with chemically similar molecules. Researchers can also replace the surfactant with a biocompatible thiol or use a polymerizable surfactant that can be "stitched" onto the nanorods and reduce its lability. In all these cases, however, proteins or other molecules from the cellular media cover the engineered surface of the nanoparticles, which can drastically change the charges and functional groups on the nanoparticle surface.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22732239     DOI: 10.1021/ar300015b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  33 in total

Review 1.  Force fields for simulating the interaction of surfaces with biological molecules.

Authors:  Lewis Martin; Marcela M Bilek; Anthony S Weiss; Serdar Kuyucak
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2016-02-06       Impact factor: 3.906

2.  Inorganic Nanoparticles for Therapeutic Delivery: Trials, Tribulations and Promise.

Authors:  Gulen Yesilbag Tonga; Daniel F Moyano; Chang Soo Kim; Vincent M Rotello
Journal:  Curr Opin Colloid Interface Sci       Date:  2014-04-01       Impact factor: 6.448

3.  Systematic in vitro toxicological screening of gold nanoparticles designed for nanomedicine applications.

Authors:  Pratap C Naha; Peter Chhour; David P Cormode
Journal:  Toxicol In Vitro       Date:  2015-05-30       Impact factor: 3.500

Review 4.  A physiological perspective on the use of imaging to assess the in vivo delivery of therapeutics.

Authors:  Shengping Qin; Brett Z Fite; M Karen J Gagnon; Jai W Seo; Fitz-Roy Curry; Frits Thorsen; Katherine W Ferrara
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2013-09-10       Impact factor: 3.934

5.  XAV939: from a small inhibitor to a potent drug bioconjugate when delivered by gold nanoparticles.

Authors:  Lauren A Austin; Megan A Mackey; Marwa M Afifi; Mostafa A El-Sayed
Journal:  Bioconjug Chem       Date:  2014-01-10       Impact factor: 4.774

6.  Understanding the interactions between porphyrin-containing photosensitizers and polymer-coated nanoparticles in model biological environments.

Authors:  Samir V Jenkins; Avinash Srivatsan; Kimberly Y Reynolds; Feng Gao; Yongbin Zhang; Colin D Heyes; Ravindra K Pandey; Jingyi Chen
Journal:  J Colloid Interface Sci       Date:  2015-09-15       Impact factor: 8.128

7.  Facile method to stain the bacterial cell surface for super-resolution fluorescence microscopy.

Authors:  Ian L Gunsolus; Dehong Hu; Cosmin Mihai; Samuel E Lohse; Chang-soo Lee; Marco D Torelli; Robert J Hamers; Catherine J Murhpy; Galya Orr; Christy L Haynes
Journal:  Analyst       Date:  2014-05-09       Impact factor: 4.616

8.  Highly scalable, closed-loop synthesis of drug-loaded, layer-by-layer nanoparticles.

Authors:  Santiago Correa; Ki Young Choi; Erik C Dreaden; Kasper Renggli; Aria Shi; Li Gu; Kevin E Shopsowitz; Mohiuddin A Quadir; Elana Ben-Akiva; Paula T Hammond
Journal:  Adv Funct Mater       Date:  2016-01-03       Impact factor: 18.808

9.  Multiplexed TEM Specimen Preparation and Analysis of Plasmonic Nanoparticles.

Authors:  Sean K Mulligan; Jeffrey A Speir; Ivan Razinkov; Anchi Cheng; John Crum; Tilak Jain; Erika Duggan; Er Liu; John P Nolan; Bridget Carragher; Clinton S Potter
Journal:  Microsc Microanal       Date:  2015-08       Impact factor: 4.127

10.  Multimodal Nonlinear Optical Imaging of Live Cells Using Plasmon-Coupled DNA-Mediated Gold Nanoprism Assembly.

Authors:  Sudarson Sekhar Sinha; Stacy Jones; Teresa Demeritte; Suhash Reddy Chavva; Yongliang Shi; Jasmine Burrell; Avijit Pramanik; Paresh Chandra Ray
Journal:  J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces       Date:  2016-02-19       Impact factor: 4.126

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