| Literature DB >> 28063357 |
Wen-Shuo Kuo1, Hua-Han Chen2, Shih-Yao Chen3, Chia-Yuan Chang4, Pei-Chi Chen5, Yung-I Hou6, Yu-Ting Shao7, Hui-Fang Kao8, Chih-Li Lilian Hsu9, Yi-Chun Chen10, Shean-Jen Chen11, Shang-Rung Wu12, Jiu-Yao Wang13.
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species is the main contributor to photodynamic therapy. The results of this study show that a nitrogen-doped graphene quantum dot, serving as a photosensitizer, was capable of generating a higher amount of reactive oxygen species than a nitrogen-free graphene quantum dot in photodynamic therapy when photoexcited for only 3 min of 670 nm laser exposure (0.1 W cm-2), indicating highly improved antimicrobial effects. In addition, we found that higher nitrogen-bonding compositions of graphene quantum dots more efficiently performed photodynamic therapy actions than did the lower compositions that underwent identical treatments. Furthermore, the intrinsically emitted luminescence from nitrogen-doped graphene quantum dots and high photostability simultaneously enabled it to act as a promising contrast probe for tracking and localizing bacteria in biomedical imaging. Thus, the dual modality of nitrogen-doped graphene quantum dots presents possibilities for future clinical applications, and in particular multidrug resistant bacteria.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial; Contrast probe; Nitrogen-doped graphene quantum dot; Photodynamic therapy; Photostability; Reactive oxygen species
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28063357 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.12.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479