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Peptide-coated platinum nanoparticles with selective toxicity against liver cancer cells

Authors :
Thomas Vonderach
Michal S. Shoshan
Helma Wennemers
Bodo Hattendorf
Source :
Angewandte Chemie. International Edition, 58 (15)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Peptide-stabilized platinum nanoparticles (PtNPs) were developed that have significantly greater toxicity against hepatic cancer cells (HepG2) than against other cancer cells and non-cancerous liver cells. The peptide H-Lys-Pro-Gly-dLys-NH2 was identified by a combinatorial screening and further optimized to enable the formation of water-soluble, monodisperse PtNPs with average diameters of 2.5 nm that are stable for years. In comparison to cisplatin, the peptide-coated PtNPs are not only more toxic against hepatic cancer cells but have a significantly higher tumor cell selectivity. Cell viability and uptake studies revealed that high cellular uptake and an oxidative environment are key for the selective cytotoxicity of the peptide-coated PtNPs.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Angewandte Chemie. International Edition, 58 (15)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a08ba246f73c0db3845baadfbde24f2b