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Surface-Chemistry Effect on Cellular Response of Luminescent Plasmonic Silver Nanoparticles
Author(s) -
Shasha Sun,
Chen Zhou,
Sishan Chen,
Jinbin Liu,
Jing Yu,
Jennifer L. Chilek,
Liang Zhao,
Mengxiao Yu,
Rodrigo D. Vinluan,
Bo Huang,
Jie Zheng
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
bioconjugate chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.279
H-Index - 172
eISSN - 1520-4812
pISSN - 1043-1802
DOI - 10.1021/bc500008a
Subject(s) - chemistry , pegylation , biomolecule , nanoparticle , fluorescence , raman scattering , biophysics , silver nanoparticle , raman spectroscopy , surface plasmon resonance , nanotechnology , ligand (biochemistry) , polyethylene glycol , receptor , biochemistry , materials science , physics , quantum mechanics , optics , biology
Cellular response of inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) is strongly dependent on their surface chemistry. By taking advantage of robust single-particle fluorescence and giant Raman enhancements of unique polycrystalline silver NPs (AgNPs), we quantitatively investigated effects of two well-known surface chemistries, passive PEGylation and active c-RGD peptide conjugation, on in vitro behaviors of AgNPs at high temporal and spatial resolution as well as chemical level using fluorescence and Raman microscopy. The results show that specific c-RGD peptide-αvβ3 integrin interactions not only induced endosome formation more rapidly, enhanced constrained diffusion, but also minimized nonspecific chemical interactions between the NPs and intracellular biomolecules than passive PEGylation chemistry; as a result, surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) signals of c-RGD peptides were well resolved inside endosomes in the live cells, while Raman signals of PEGylated AgNPs remained unresolvable due to interference of surrounding biomolecules, opening up an opportunity to investigate specific ligand-receptor interactions in real time at the chemical level.

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