Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Polydopamine-Enabled Surface Functionalization of Gold Nanorods for Cancer Cell-Targeted Imaging and Photothermal Therapy

2012; Future Medicine; Volume: 8; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2217/nnm.12.82

ISSN

1748-6963

Autores

Kvar C. L. Black, Ji Yi, José G. Rivera, Daria C. Zelasko-Leon, Phillip B. Messersmith,

Tópico(s)

RNA Interference and Gene Delivery

Resumo

A novel biomimetic strategy was employed for presenting antibodies on gold nanorods (NRs) to target growth factor receptors on cancer cells for use in photothermal therapy.Polydopamine (PD) was polymerized onto gold NRs, and EGF receptor antibodies (anti-EGFR) were immobilized onto the layer. Cell-binding affinity and light-activated cell death of cancer cells incubated with anti-EGFR-PD-NRs were quantified by optical imaging.PD was deposited onto gold NRs, and antibodies were bound to PD-coated NRs. Anti-EGFR-PD-NRs were stable in media, and were specifically bound to EGFR-overexpressing cells. Illumination of cells targeted with anti-EGFR-PD-NRs enhanced cell death compared with nonirradiated controls and cells treated with antibody-free NRs.PD facilitates the surface functionalization of gold NRs with biomolecules, allowing cell targeting and photothermal killing of cancer cells. PD can potentially coat a large variety of nanoparticles with targeting ligands as a strategy for biofunctionalization of diagnostic and therapeutic nanoparticles.

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