| Literature DB >> 30897254 |
Carolina Carrillo-Carrión1, Raquel Martínez1, María F Navarro Poupard1, Beatriz Pelaz1, Ester Polo1, Ana Arenas-Vivo2, Alessandro Olgiati1, Pablo Taboada3, Mahmoud G Soliman4,5, Úrsula Catalán6,7, Sara Fernández-Castillejo6, Rosa Solà6,8, Wolfgang J Parak4, Patricia Horcajada2, Ramon A Alvarez-Puebla9,10, Pablo Del Pino1.
Abstract
A plasmonic core-shell gold nanostar/zeolitic-imidazolate-framework-8 (ZIF-8) nanocomposite was developed for the thermoplasmonic-driven release of encapsulated active molecules inside living cells. The nanocomposites were loaded, as a proof of concept, with bisbenzimide molecules as functional cargo and wrapped with an amphiphilic polymer that prevents ZIF-8 degradation and bisbenzimide leaking in aqueous media or inside living cells. The demonstrated molecule-release mechanism relies on the use of near-IR light coupled to the plasmonic absorption of the core gold nanostars, which creates local temperature gradients and thus, bisbenzimide thermodiffusion. Confocal microscopy and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) were used to demonstrate bisbenzimide loading/leaking and near-IR-triggered cargo release inside cells, thereby leading to DNA staining.Entities:
Keywords: ZIF-8; drug release; metal-organic frameworks; nanocomposites; thermoplasmonics
Year: 2019 PMID: 30897254 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201902817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336