| Literature DB >> 31867323 |
Yuanyuan Tian1,2, Sheng Qiang1, Lianhui Wang2.
Abstract
In recent years, tremendous efforts have been devoted into the fields of valuable diagnosis and anticancer treatment, such as real-time imaging, photothermal, and photodynamic therapy, and drug delivery. As promising nanocarriers, gold nanomaterials have attracted widespread attention during the last two decades for cancer diagnosis and therapy due to their prominent properties. With the development of nanoscience and nanotechnology, the fascinating bio-applications of functionalized gold nanomaterials have been gradually developed from in vitro to in vivo. This mini-review emphasizes some recent advances of photothermal imaging (PTI), surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) imaging, and photoacoustic imaging (PAI)-guided based on gold nanomaterials in vivo therapy in near infrared region (>800 nm). We focus on the fundamental strategies, characteristics of bio-imaging modalities involving the advantages of multiples imaging modalities for cancer treatment, and then highlight a few examples of each techniques. Finally, we discuss the perspectives and challenges in gold nanomaterial-based cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: gold nanomaterials; in vivo; photoacoustic imaging; photothermal therapy; surface-enhanced Raman scattering
Year: 2019 PMID: 31867323 PMCID: PMC6906270 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Examples of different structural characteristics, optical properties, and in vivo imaging modality.
| Nanoshells/nanomatryoshkas, thiol-PEG | 150/90 | ~800 | 2 W/cm2, 810 nm | TNBC tumor- bearing female mice | PTI, 39%/63% | Ayala-Orozco et al., |
| Nanocages, PVP and RBC-membrane | 71–89 | 810–817 | 1 W/cm2, 850 nm | 4T1 tumor- bearing BALB/c mice | PTI | Piao et al., |
| Nanoshells, thiol-PEG | ~120 | 780–800 | 4.5 W, 810 nm | Prostate cancer- patients | PTI | Rastinehad et al., |
| Nanospheres, Au–Cu9S5, PMHC18-PEG5000 | ~20 | ~1,100 | 0.6 W/cm2, 1064 nm | CT26 tumor- bearing mice | PTI, 37% | Ding et al., |
| Nanospheres, Au-silica | ~120 | 0.29 W, 785 nm | Female nude mice | SERS | Bohndiek et al., | |
| Linear gold nanospheres assemblies, rBSA-FA | 71.6 | ~650 | 0.5 W/cm2, 808/785 nm | MCF-7 tumor-bearing mice | PTI, SERS | Xia et al., |
| Nanorods, Au-Ag-silica, PEG | 80–97 | ~585 | 3 W/cm2, 660 nm | Ovarian cancer xenograft model and RCAS/TVA GBM mouse | PTI, SERS | Pal et al., |
| Nanovesicles (PEG-b-PCL) | 145 | ~800 | 1 W/cm2, 808 nm | MDA-MB-435 tumor-bearing mice | PTI, PAI, 37% | Huang et al., |
| Nanorods, PDL/IR775c layered silica | 400 | 780 | 795/920 nm | Female FVB/n mice | PAI | Dhada et al., |
| Nanorods, PNIPAM | 320 | 760 | 808 nm | Prostate cancer- bearing mice | PAI | Chen Y. S. et al., |
Figure 1Illustration of multifunctional NIR gold nanomaterials platform for three imaging modalities.