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Mechanism for the Cellular Uptake of Targeted Gold Nanorods of Defined Aspect Ratios
Author(s) -
Yang Hongrong,
Chen Zhong,
Zhang Lei,
Yung WingYin,
Leung Ken ChamFai,
Chan Ho Yin Edwin,
Choi Chung Hang Jonathan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201601483
Subject(s) - nanorod , endosome , intracellular , colloidal gold , nanotechnology , biophysics , photothermal therapy , nanoparticle , ethylene glycol , endocytosis , materials science , chemistry , cell , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry
Biomedical applications of non‐spherical nanoparticles such as photothermal therapy and molecular imaging require their efficient intracellular delivery, yet reported details on their interactions with the cell remain inconsistent. Here, the effects of nanoparticle geometry and receptor targeting on the cellular uptake and intracellular trafficking are systematically explored by using C166 (mouse endothelial) cells and gold nanoparticles of four different aspect ratios (ARs) from 1 to 7. When coated with poly(ethylene glycol) strands, the cellular uptake of untargeted nanoparticles monotonically decreases with AR. Next, gold nanoparticles are functionalized with DNA oligonucleotides to target Class A scavenger receptors expressed by C166 cells. Intriguingly, cellular uptake is maximized at a particular AR: shorter nanorods (AR = 2) enter C166 cells more than nanospheres (AR = 1) and longer nanorods (AR = 4 or 7). Strikingly, long targeted nanorods align to the cell membrane in a near‐parallel manner followed by rotating by ≈90° to enter the cell via a caveolae‐mediated pathway. Upon cellular entry, targeted nanorods of all ARs predominantly traffic to the late endosome without progressing to the lysosome. The studies yield important materials design rules for drug delivery carriers based on targeted, anisotropic nanoparticles.