Inhibitation
of Cellular Toxicity of Gold Nanoparticles by Surface Encapsulation
of Silica Shell for Hepatocarcinoma Cell Application
Posted on 2014-11-12 - 00:00
Nanotechnology,
as a double-edged sword, endows gold
nanoparticles (GNPs) more “power” in bioimaging and
theragnostics, whereas an outstanding issue associated with the biocompatibility
of GNPs should also be addressed. Especially for the silica-coated
gold nanospheres (GNSs) and gold nanorods (GNRs), there is increasing
attention to explore the application, because the surface silica encapsulation
has been proved to be an alternative strategy for other organic surface
coatings. However, among those reports there are very limited publications
to focus on the toxicity of silica-coated GNSs and GNRs. Besides,
the existing detoxification methods via surface chemistry on GNPs
greatly improve the biocompatibility but still undergo challenges
for high dose (>100 pM) demand and long-term stability. Here, we
demonstrated a straightforward, low-cost, universal strategy for the
surface chemistry on GNPs via silica encapsulating. Different size,
shape, dose, and surface capping of GNPs for the nanotoxicity test
have been carefully discussed. After silica encapsulating, the detoxification
for all GNPs presents significantly from HepG2 cell proliferation
results, especially for the GNRs. This new straightforward strategy
will definitely rationalize the biocompatibility issue of GNPs and
also provide potential for other surface chemistry methodology in
biomedical fields.
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Zeng, Qinghui; Zhang, Youlin; Ji, Wenyu; Ye, Weiguang; Jiang, Yinglei; Song, Jie (2016). Inhibitation
of Cellular Toxicity of Gold Nanoparticles by Surface Encapsulation
of Silica Shell for Hepatocarcinoma Cell Application. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/am505417v