| Literature DB >> 27308890 |
Joan Comenge1, Oihane Fragueiro2, Jack Sharkey3, Arthur Taylor3, Marie Held1, Neal C Burton4, Brian Kevin Park3, Bettina Wilm3, Patricia Murray3, Mathias Brust2, Raphaël Lévy1.
Abstract
Gold nanorods are excellent contrast agents for imaging technologies which rely on near-infrared absorption such as photoacoustic imaging. For cell tracking applications, the cells of interest are labeled with the contrast agent prior to injection. However, after uptake into cells by endocytosis, the confinement and high concentration in endosomes leads to plasmon band broadening and reduced absorbance. This would limit the potential of multispectral optoacoustic tomography in terms of spectral processing and, consequently, sensitivity. Here, we show that steric hindrance provided by silica coating of the nanorods leads to the preservation of their spectral properties and improved photoacoustic sensitivity. This strategy allowed the detection and monitoring of as few as 2 × 10(4) mesenchymal stem cells in mice over a period of 15 days with a high spatial resolution. Importantly, the silica-coated nanorods did not affect the viability or differentiation potential of the transplanted mesenchymal stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: MSOT; gold nanorods; photoacoustic imaging; plasmon coupling; silica; stem cells
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27308890 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b03246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881