4.8 Article

Uptake and intracellular fate of surface-modified gold nanoparticles

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 2, Issue 8, Pages 1639-1644

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn800330a

Keywords

cellular uptake; gold nanoparticles; liposomes; cell penetrating peptides; nuclear targeting; transmission electron microscopy

Funding

  1. European Union (FP6 Marie Curie R&T Network PATTERNS)
  2. Royal Society

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Understanding and controlling the interactions between nanoscale objects and living cells is of great importance for arising diagnostic and therapeutic applications of nanoparticles and for nanotoxicology studies. Here we report a detailed transmission electron microscopy (TEM) study of the uptake of ca. 16 nm surface-modified gold nanoparticles by human fibroblast cells (HeLa cells). It is demonstrated that the well-established enclosomal route of cellular uptake can be bypassed to a significant extent by controlling the uptake mechanism either via the delivery of the nanoparticles by liposomes or by surface modification of the nanoparticles with socalled cell penetrating peptides (CPPs). Successful nuclear targeting is demonstrated using surface modification with a cocktail of CPPs and a peptide acting as a nuclear localization signal (NLS).

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