Paper
24 March 2014 Plasmonic biodegradable gold nanoclusters with high NIR-absorbance for biomedical imaging
Robert Stover, Avinash Murthy, Sai Gourisankar, Golay Nie, Miguel Martinez, Thomas Truskett, Konstantin Sokolov, Keith Johnston
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Gold plasmonic nanoparticles are receiving attention for a variety of types of NIR optical biomedical imaging including photoacoustic imaging. Herein we present a novel method to assemble equilibrium gold nanoclusters from 5 nm primary gold nanospheres, which exhibit high near-infrared (NIR) absorbance and subsequently fully dissociate back to primary particles, which has the potential to enable renal clearance. The nanoparticle assembly is manipulated via controlling colloidal interactions, specifically electrostatic repulsion and depletion attraction. The charge on the primary ~5 nm gold nanospheres is tailored via place exchange reactions with a variety of biocompatible ligands such as citrate, lysine and cysteine. The primary particles form clusters upon addition of a biodegradable polymer, PLA(1k)-b- PEG(10k)-b-PLA(1k), followed by controlled solvent evaporation. The cluster size may be tuned from 20-40 nm in diameter by manipulating the gold and polymer concentrations along with the solvent evaporation extent. Salt is also added to increase the NIR absorbance and reduce the nanocluster size by reducing polymer adsorption. The adsorption of the polymer onto the Au surfaces effectively quenches the nanoclusters. High NIR absorption facilitates photoacoustic imaging, even for the small cluster sizes. In response to acidic cellular pH environments, the polymer degrades and the clusters dissociate back to primary particle on the order of 5 nm, which are small enough for renal clearance.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert Stover, Avinash Murthy, Sai Gourisankar, Golay Nie, Miguel Martinez, Thomas Truskett, Konstantin Sokolov, and Keith Johnston "Plasmonic biodegradable gold nanoclusters with high NIR-absorbance for biomedical imaging", Proc. SPIE 8955, Colloidal Nanoparticles for Biomedical Applications IX, 89550T (24 March 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2040289
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Gold

Polymers

Near infrared

Adsorption

Nanoparticles

Particles

Proteins

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