Intravenously administered nanoparticles (NPs) often bind with plasma proteins, forming the protein corona that promotes rapid systemic clearance, a primary challenge in nanomedicine. In this study, we developed a pH- and GSH-sensitive "stealth" nanodelivery system, PTX@NPs-aPD1-IL, for sequential drug release. By using a biocompatible choline-based ionic liquid (IL) as the coating for NPs, the interaction and adsorption of NPs with serum proteins were reduced, achieving targeted delivery to the lung organ and increasing drug accumulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, the incidence of brain diseases, such as central nervous system degenerative diseases, brain tumors, and cerebrovascular diseases, has increased. However, the blood-brain barrier (BBB) limits the effective delivery of drugs to brain disease areas. Therefore, the mainstream direction of new drug development for these diseases is to engineer drugs that can better cross the BBB to exert their effects in the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExosomal programmed death ligand-1 (ExoPD-L1) is a vital marker of immune activation in the early stages of tumor therapy and it can inhibit anti-tumor immune responses. However, due to the low expression of ExoPD-L1 in cancer cells, it is difficult to perform highly sensitive assays and accurately differentiate cancer sources. Therefore, we constructed a coaxial dual-path electrochemical biosensor for highly accurate identification and detection of ExoPD-L1 from lung cancer based on chemical-biological coaxial nanomaterials and nucleic acid molecular signal amplification strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is a combination of raw herbs and herbal extracts with a plethora of documented beneficial bioactivities, which has unique advantages in anti-tumor therapy, and many of its major bioactive molecules have been identified in recent years due to advances in chemical separation and structural analysis. However, the major chemical classes of plant-derived bioactive compounds frequently possess chemical properties, including poor water solubility, stability, and bioavailability, that limit their therapeutic application. Alternatively, natural small molecules (NSMs) containing these components possess modifiable groups, multiple action sites, hydrophobic side chains, and a rigid skeleton with self-assembly properties that can be exploited to construct self-assembled nanoparticles with therapeutic effects superior to their individual constituents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMatrix assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is a novel soft ionization bio-mass spectrometry technology emerging in the 1980s, which can realize rapid detection of non-volatile, highly polar, and thermally unstable macromolecules. However, the analysis of small molecular compounds has been a major problem for MALDI-TOF MS all the time. In the MALDI analysis process based on traditional matrices, large numbers of interference peaks in the low molecular weight area and "sweet spots" phenomenon are produced, so the detection method needs to be further optimized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been reported that more than 90% of cancer patients are died from cancer metastasis. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) could detach from solid tumors to form new lesions via blood transport and play an important role in cancer metastasis and progression. As part of the liquid biopsy, the investigation and analysis toward CTCs are of great importance for prognosis assessment and tumor precision medical treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLow-toxicity gold nanoclusters-decorated Ag@SiO (Au NCs-Ag@SiO) nanocomposites modified plasmonic photoelectrodes were first fabricated to improve the photoelectric properties of Au NCs and practical application in biological detection. Through adjusting distance between Au NCs and plasmonic silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs), the photocurrent intensity of Au NCs enhanced by 3.8 times attributed to strong competition between enhancement functions of hot electron transfer, local electric field, light scattering effects, and quenching functions of nonradiative energy transfer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRatiometric fluorescent nanosensors were developed to detect mercury ions (Hg2+) using enhanced dual emissions from glutathione stabilized gold nanoclusters/indium-based metal-organic frameworks modified with cysteine (AuNCs/MIL-68(In)-NH2/Cys). The nanosensors exhibited bright pink fluorescence with AuNCs evenly distributed on MIL-68(In)-NH2. Under 370 nm excitation, the obtained sensor presented double fluorescence emission around 438 nm and 668 nm, which was attributed to MIL-68(In)-NH2 and GSH-AuNCs, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, glassy carbon electrode (GCE) surface was modified by drop-coating graphene oxide (GO) and nile blue (NB) to form GO/NB/GCE. By using a one-step coreduction treatment under cyclic voltammetry (CV) scanning, gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) were electrodeposited onto GO/NB/GCE surface, simultaneously generating reduced GO (rGO). AuNPs from the prepared rGO/NB/AuNPs/GCE was combined with 5'-SH-terminated aptamer of dopamine (DA) via Au-S coupling to fabricate aptamer-rGO/NB/AuNPs/GCE system.
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