The Enhancement Effect of Gold Nanoparticles in Drug Delivery and as Biomarkers of Drug‐Resistant Cancer Cells
- 1 March 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in ChemMedChem
- Vol. 2 (3) , 374-378
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.200600264
Abstract
The enhancement effect of 3-mercaptopropionic acid capped gold nanoparticles (NPs) in drug delivery and as biomarkers of drug-resistant cancer cells has been demonstrated through fluorescence microscopy and electrochemical studies. The results of cell viability experiments and confocal fluorescence microscopy studies illustrate that these functionalized Au NPs could play an important role in efficient drug delivery and biomarking of drug-resistant leukemia K562/ADM cells. This could be explored as a novel strategy to inhibit multidrug resistance in targeted tumor cells and as a sensitive method for the early diagnosis of certain cancers. Our observations also indicate that the interaction between the functionalized Au NPs and biologically active molecules on the surface of leukemia cells may contribute the observed enhancement in cellular drug uptake.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Optical Biosensor for Rapid and Label-Free Detection of CellsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2006
- Porous Gold Nanospheres by Controlled Transmetalation Reaction: A Novel Material for Application in Cell ImagingChemistry of Materials, 2005
- Tat Peptide as an Efficient Molecule To Translocate Gold Nanoparticles into the Cell NucleusBioconjugate Chemistry, 2005
- Phospholipid-Stabilized Au−NanoparticlesBiomacromolecules, 2005
- Effect of Macromolecular Crowding on DNA:Au Nanoparticle Bioconjugate AssemblyLangmuir, 2004
- Monofunctional Group-Modified Gold Nanoparticles from Solid Phase Synthesis Approach: Solid Support and Experimental Condition EffectChemistry of Materials, 2004
- DNAzyme-Functionalized Au Nanoparticles for the Amplified Detection of DNA or Telomerase ActivityNano Letters, 2004
- Composite of Au Nanoparticles and Molecularly Imprinted Polymer as a Sensing MaterialAnalytical Chemistry, 2004
- DNA-Controlled Assembly of Protein-Modified Gold NanocrystalsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2002
- Synthesis and Characterization of Carboxylate-Modified Gold Nanoparticle Powders Dispersible in WaterLangmuir, 1999