Development of biocompatible apatite nanorod-based drug-delivery system with in situ fluorescence imaging capacity
Date
Authors
Singh, Rajendra K.
Kim, Tae Hyun
Patel, Kapil D.
Kim, Jung Ju
Kim, Hae Won
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Statement
Abstract
Biocompatible and multifunctional nanocarriers significantly improve the therapeutic and diagnostic efficacy of the cargo molecules. Here we report a novel biocompatible apatite nanocrystal-based delivery system with in situ imaging capacity. A nanorod (40 nm × 10 nm) produced by a citrate-involved sol-gel process expressed a strong blue emission at 427 nm under fluorescence microscopy. The CO2- radical impurities present in the apatite crystal lattice account for the fluorescent behavior. The fluorescent nanorods exhibited excellent cell viability (over 90% up to ∼100 μg ml-1 concentration for both osteoblasts and osteoclasts). The nanorods loaded alendronate drug at a high efficiency (10%) and released over 3 days, while enabling in situ fluorescence imaging within the cells. The fluorescent apatite was further hybridized onto the surface of mesoporous nanospheres, aimed at improving the drug-delivery capacity. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) gene, encoding Plekho-1, was effectively loaded to the hybrid nanocarrier, and was sustainably released over 5 days. The siRNA-loaded nanocarrier exhibited excellent osteoblastic uptake (96% efficiency) and gene-silencing effect, suppressing Plekho-1 down to ∼18%, while preserving intracellular fluorescence signals. Taken as a whole, the self-fluorescent nature of apatite nanorods is believed to find potential and versatile applications as biocompatible drug-delivery and in situ imaging systems. This journal is
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication