163 research outputs found
Biocompatible Gold Nanorod Conjugates for Preclinical Biomedical Research
Gold nanorods with a peak absorption wavelength of 760 nm were prepared using a seed-mediated method. A novel protocol has been developed to replace hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide on the surface of the nanorods with 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid and metoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)-thiol, and the monoclonal antibody HER2. The physical chemistry properties of the conjugates were monitored through optical and zeta-potential measurements to confirm surface chemistry changes. The efficiency of the modifications was quantified through measurement of the average number of antibodies per gold nanorod. The conjugates were investigated for different cells lines: BT-474, MCF7, MCF10, MDCK, and fibroblast. The results show successful cell accumulation of the gold nanorod HER2 conjugates in cells with HER2 overexpression. Incubation of the complexes in heparinized mouse blood demonstrated the low aggregation of the metallic particles through stability of the spectral properties, as verified by UV/VIS spectrometry. Cytotoxicity analysis with LDH release and MTT assay confirms strong targeting and retention of functional activity of the antibody after their conjugation with gold nanorods. Silver staining confirms efficient specific binding to BT-474 cells even in cases where the nanorod complexes were incubated in heparinized mouse blood. This is confirmed through in vivo studies where, following intravenous injection of gold nanorod complexes, silver staining reveals noticeably higher rates of specific binding in mouse tumors than in healthy liver. The conjugates are reproducible, have strong molecular targeting capabilities, have long term stability in vivo and can be used in pre-clinical applications.
The conjugates can also be used for molecular and optoacoustic imaging, quantitative sensing of biological substrates, and photothermal therapy
Structure-Dependent Fluorescence Efficiencies of Individual Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
Single-nanotube photometry was used to measure the product of absorption
cross-section and fluorescence quantum yield for 12 (n,m) structural species of
semiconducting SWNTs in aqueous SDBS suspension. These products ranged from 1.7
to 4.5 x 10(-19) cm2/C atom, generally increasing with optical band gap as
described by the energy gap law. The findings suggest fluorescent quantum
yields of ~8% for the brightest, (10,2) species and introduce the empirical
calibration factors needed to deduce quantitative (n,m) distributions from bulk
fluorimetric intensities
Stepwise Quenching of Exciton Fluorescence in Carbon Nanotubes by Single Molecule Reactions
Single-molecule chemical reactions with individual single-walled carbon
nanotubes were observed through near-infrared photoluminescence microscopy. The
emission intensity within distinct submicrometer segments of single nanotubes
changes in discrete steps after exposure to acid, base, or diazonium reactants.
The steps are uncorrelated in space and time, and reflect the quenching of
mobile excitons at localized sites of reversible or irreversible chemical
attack. Analysis of step amplitudes reveals an exciton diffusional range of
about 90 nanometers, independent of nanotube structure. Each exciton visits
approximately 104 atomic sites during its lifetime, providing highly efficient
sensing of local chemical and physical perturbations
Shear-strain step response in linear regime of dilute suspensions of naturally bent carbon nanotubes
Impressive enhancements of the storage modulus have been documented when low volume fractions of single wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) are added to a Newtonian solvent for obtaining dilute suspensions. The intrinsic bending dynamics of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) has been proposed to explain such elasticity. CNTs contain topological defects inducing naturally bent structures in absence of external forces and, hence, a semiflexible filament with a bent configuration at minimal internal-bending-energy is used for mimicking the structure of SWNTs in suspension. Previous continuous model is discretized as a non-freely jointed bead-rod chain with a naturally bent configuration for simulating the rheological behaviour after a shear-strain step in linear regime of SWNT dilute suspension by using a Brownian dynamics (BD) approach. In general, bead-rod chains exhibit an instantaneous relaxation after a high shear-strain step. Bending rigidity and number of constitutive rods are found to be determinant parameters in the internal-energy relaxation behaviour of non-freely jointed bead-rod chains in dilute solution. Proper comparisons between the BD simulation results and the experimental data for treated SWNT dilute suspensions confirm the consistency of the physical model mimicking the structure of a SWNT
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