Biological
Targeting of Plasmonic Nanoparticles Improves
Cellular Imaging via the Enhanced Scattering in the Aggregates Formed
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Abstract
Gold
nanoparticles (AuNPs) demonstrate great promise in biomedical
applications due to their plasmonically enhanced imaging properties.
When in close proximity, AuNPs plasmonic fields couple together, increasing
their scattering cross-section due to the formation of hot spots,
improving their imaging utility. In the present study, we modified
the AuNPs surface with different peptides to target the nucleus and/or
the cell as a whole, resulting in similar cellular uptake but different
scattering intensities. Nuclear-targeted AuNPs showed the greatest
scattering due to the formation of denser nanoparticle clusters (i.e.,
increased localization). We also obtained a dynamic profile of AuNP
localization in living cells, indicating that nuclear localization
is directly related to the number of nuclear-targeting peptides on
the AuNP surface. Increased localization led to increased plasmonic
field coupling, resulting in significantly higher scattering intensity.
Thus, biochemical targeting of plasmonic nanoparticles to subcellular
components is expected to lead to more resolved imaging of cellular
processes