| Literature DB >> 35268651 |
Wen-Chin Ko1,2, Su-Jane Wang1, Chien-Yu Hsiao3,4, Chen-Ting Hung5, Yu-Jou Hsu6, Der-Chen Chang7, Chi-Feng Hung1,6,8.
Abstract
Gold has always been regarded as a symbol of nobility, and its shiny golden appearance has always attracted the attention of many people. Gold has good ductility, molecular recognition properties, and good biocompatibility. At present, gold is being used in many fields. When gold particles are as small as several nanometers, their physical and chemical properties vary with their size in nanometers. The surface area of a nano-sized gold surface has a special effect. Therefore, gold nanoparticles can, directly and indirectly, give rise to different biological activities. For example, if the surface of the gold is sulfided. Various substances have a strong chemical reactivity and are easy to combine with sulfhydryl groups; hence, nanogold is often used in biomedical testing, disease diagnosis, and gene detection. Nanogold is easy to bind to proteins, such as antibodies, enzymes, or cytokines. In fact, scientists use nanogold to bind special antibodies, as a tool for targeting cancer cells. Gold nanoparticles are also directly cytotoxic to cancer cells. For diseases caused by inflammation and oxidative damage, gold nanoparticles also have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. Based on these unique properties, gold nanoparticles have become the most widely studied metal nanomaterials. Many recent studies have further demonstrated that gold nanoparticles are beneficial for humans, due to their functional pharmacological properties in a variety of diseases. The content of this review will be the application of gold nanoparticles in treating or diagnosing pressing diseases, such as cancers, retinopathy, neurological diseases, skin disorders, bowel diseases, bone cartilage disorders, cardiovascular diseases, infections, and metabolic syndrome. Gold nanoparticles have shown very obvious therapeutic and application potential.Entities:
Keywords: anti-angiogenesis; anti-inflammation; antioxidant; cancer; gold nanoparticles; nanogold
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35268651 PMCID: PMC8911979 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27051551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Physiological and pharmacological functions of nanogold in various organ systems and diseases.
Summary of the effects and mechanisms of gold nanoparticles in diseases.
| Diseases | Applications (Future) or Possible Action Mechanisms |
|---|---|
| Cancers | Anti-cancer activity; cancer diagnosis; imaging applications; photothermal and photodynamic therapies; anti-cancer drug and gene delivery |
| Retinopathy | Anti-angiogenesis; anti-inflammation; reduced the VEGF activation and induced cell proliferation and migration |
| Neurological diseases | Inhibited the aggregation of Aβ peptides and the degradation of Aβ aggregates; inhibition of acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase; anti-inflammation |
| Skin disorders | Wound healing; acne; synergistic effect with natural products |
| Bowel diseases | Against inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD); |
| Bone cartilage disorders | Rheumatoid arthritis treatment; |
| Cardiovascular diseases | CT imaging as CT contrast agents; anti-inflammatory biological activity; reduce arterial neointimal hyperplasia |
| Infections | Antimicrobial effects; overcome microbial drug resistance; detect specific DNA fragments of |
| Metabolic syndrome | Type 2 diabetes and obesity treatment; improvement in glucose intolerance and hyperlipidemia; lipolysis; more effects during liposuction |