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Bioorthogonal chemistry amplifies nanoparticle binding and enhances the sensitivity of cell detection
Author(s) -
Jered B. Haun,
Neal K. Devaraj,
Scott A. Hilderbrand,
Hakho Lee,
Ralph Weissleder
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
nature nanotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 14.308
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1748-3395
pISSN - 1748-3387
DOI - 10.1038/nnano.2010.148
Subject(s) - bioorthogonal chemistry , nanotechnology , tetrazine , nanomaterials , avidin , nanoparticle , bioconjugation , materials science , chemistry , click chemistry , biotin , combinatorial chemistry , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Nanoparticles have emerged as key materials for biomedical applications because of their unique and tunable physical properties, multivalent targeting capability, and high cargo capacity. Motivated by these properties and by current clinical needs, numerous diagnostic and therapeutic nanomaterials have recently emerged. Here we describe a novel nanoparticle targeting platform that uses a rapid, catalyst-free cycloaddition as the coupling mechanism. Antibodies against biomarkers of interest were modified with trans-cyclooctene and used as scaffolds to couple tetrazine-modified nanoparticles onto live cells. We show that the technique is fast, chemoselective, adaptable to metal nanomaterials, and scalable for biomedical use. This method also supports amplification of biomarker signals, making it superior to alternative targeting techniques including avidin/biotin.

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