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Gold hybrid nanoparticles for targeted phototherapy and cancer imaging

Authors :
Diego A. Rey
Carl A. Batt
Dickson K. Kirui
Source :
Nanotechnology. 21(10)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Gold and iron oxide hybrid nanoparticles (HNPs) synthesized by the thermal decomposition technique are bio-functionalized with a single chain antibody, scFv, that binds to the A33 antigen present on colorectal cancer cells. The HNP–scFv conjugates are stable in aqueous solution with a magnetization value of 44 emu g − 1 and exhibit strong optical absorbance at 800 nm. Here we test this material in targeting, imaging and selective thermal killing of colorectal cancer cells. Cellular uptake studies showed that A33-expressing cells take up the A33scFv-conjugated HNPs at a rate five times higher than cells that do not express the A33 antigen. Laser irradiation studies showed that approximately 53% of the A33-expressing cells exposed to targeted HNPs are killed after a six-minute laser treatment at 5.1 W cm − 2 using a 808 nm continuous wave laser diode while < 5% of A33-nonexpressing cells are killed. At a higher intensity, 31.5 W cm − 2, the thermal destruction increases to 99 and 40% for A33-expressing cells and A33 nonexpressing cells, respectively, after 6 min exposure. Flow cytometric analyses of the laser-irradiated A33 antigen-expressing cells show apoptosis-related cell death to be the primary mode of cell death at 5.1 W cm − 2, with increasing necrosis-related cell death at higher laser power. These results suggest that this new class of bio-conjugated hybrid nanoparticles can potentially serve as an effective antigen-targeted photothermal therapeutic agent for cancer treatment as well as a probe for magnetic resonance-based imaging.

Details

ISSN :
13616528
Volume :
21
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nanotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a786700c66f1c4f96d05bca3852a9b6