Facile Synthesis of Uniform Virus-like Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles for Enhanced Cellular Internalization
Author(s) -
Wenxing Wang,
Peiyuan Wang,
Xueting Tang,
Ahmed A. Elzatahry,
Shuwen Wang,
Daifallah AlDahyan,
Mengyao Zhao,
Chi Yao,
ChinTe Hung,
Xiaohang Zhu,
Tiancong Zhao,
Xiaomin Li,
Fan Zhang,
Dongyuan Zhao
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs central science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.893
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 2374-7951
pISSN - 2374-7943
DOI - 10.1021/acscentsci.7b00257
Subject(s) - nanoparticle , materials science , mesoporous silica , nanotechnology , mesoporous material , nanowire , chemical engineering , micelle , surface modification , chemistry , organic chemistry , catalysis , engineering , aqueous solution
The low-efficiency cellular uptake property of current nanoparticles greatly restricts their application in the biomedical field. Herein, we demonstrate that novel virus-like mesoporous silica nanoparticles can easily be synthesized, showing greatly superior cellular uptake property. The unique virus-like mesoporous silica nanoparticles with a spiky tubular rough surface have been successfully synthesized via a novel single-micelle epitaxial growth approach in a low-concentration-surfactant oil/water biphase system. The virus-like nanoparticles' rough surface morphology results mainly from the mesoporous silica nanotubes spontaneously grown via an epitaxial growth process. The obtained nanoparticles show uniform particle size and excellent monodispersity. The structural parameters of the nanoparticles can be well tuned with controllable core diameter (∼60-160 nm), tubular length (∼6-70 nm), and outer diameter (∼6-10 nm). Thanks to the biomimetic morphology, the virus-like nanoparticles show greatly superior cellular uptake property (invading living cells in large quantities within few minutes, <5 min), unique internalization pathways, and extended blood circulation duration ( t 1/2 = 2.16 h), which is much longer than that of conventional mesoporous silica nanoparticles (0.45 h). Furthermore, our epitaxial growth strategy can be applied to fabricate various virus-like mesoporous core-shell structures, paving the way toward designed synthesis of virus-like nanocomposites for biomedicine applications.
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