| Literature DB >> 26549208 |
Dennis Curry1, Amanda Cameron2, Bruce MacDonald3, Collins Nganou2, Hope Scheller4, James Marsh3, Stefanie Beale5, Mingsheng Lu2, Zhi Shan2, Rajendran Kaliaperumal2, Heping Xu6, Mark Servos7, Craig Bennett5, Stephanie MacQuarrie3, Ken D Oakes4, Martin Mkandawire2, Xu Zhang2.
Abstract
Gold nanomaterials have received great interest for their use in cancer theranostic applications over the past two decades. Many gold nanoparticle-based drug delivery system designs rely on adsorbed ligands such as DNA or cleavable linkers to load therapeutic cargo. The heightened research interest was recently demonstrated in the simple design of nanoparticle-drug conjugates wherein drug molecules are directly adsorbed onto the as-synthesized nanoparticle surface. The potent chemotherapeutic, doxorubicin often serves as a model drug for gold nanoparticle-based delivery platforms; however, the specific interaction facilitating adsorption in this system remains understudied. Here, for the first time, we propose empirical and theoretical evidence suggestive of the main adsorption process where (1) hydrophobic forces drive doxorubicin towards the gold nanoparticle surface before (2) cation-π interactions and gold-carbonyl coordination between the drug molecule and the cations on AuNP surface facilitate DOX adsorption. In addition, biologically relevant compounds, such as serum albumin and glutathione, were shown to enhance desorption of loaded drug molecules from AuNP at physiologically relevant concentrations, providing insight into the drug release and in vivo stability of such drug conjugates.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26549208 DOI: 10.1039/c5nr05826k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790