| Literature DB >> 26458137 |
Min Zheng1,2,3, Shaobo Ruan4, Shi Liu3, Tingting Sun3,5, Dan Qu2,5, Haifeng Zhao2, Zhigang Xie3, Huile Gao4, Xiabin Jing3, Zaicheng Sun2,6.
Abstract
A new type of carbon dots (CD-Asp) with targeting function toward brain cancer glioma was synthesized via a straightforward pyrolysis route by using D-glucose and L-aspartic acid as starting materials. The as-prepared CD-Asp exhibits not only excellent biocompatibility and tunable full-color emission, but also significant capability of targeting C6 glioma cells without the aid of any extra targeting molecules. In vivo fluorescence images showed high-contrast biodistribution of CD-Asp 15 min after tail vein injection. A much stronger fluorescent signal was detected in the glioma site than that in normal brain, indicating their ability to freely penetrate the blood-brain barrier and precisely targeting glioma tissue. However, its counterparts, the CDs synthesized from D-glucose (CD-G), L-asparic acid (CD-A), or D-glucose and L-glutamic acid (CD-Glu) have no or low selectivity for glioma. Therefore, CD-Asp could act as a fluorescence imaging and targeting agent for noninvasive glioma diagnosis. This work highlights the potential application of CDs for constructing an intelligent nanomedicine with integration of diagnostic, targeting, and therapeutic functions.Entities:
Keywords: brain cancer glioma; carbon dots; diagnosis; full-color emission; targeted imaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26458137 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b05575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881