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Title: Folic acid-cysteamine modified gold nanoparticle as a nanoprobe for targeted computed tomography imaging of cancer cells. Author: Khademi S, Sarkar S, Shakeri-Zadeh A, Attaran N, Kharrazi S, Ay MR, Ghadiri H. Journal: Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl; 2018 Aug 01; 89():182-193. PubMed ID: 29752088. Abstract: Development of various cost-effective multifunctional nanoprobes for efficient targeted molecular imaging of tumors remains a great challenge in medicine. Herein, we report a simple method of forming folic acid-targeted multifunctional gold nanoparticles via cost-effective cysteamine as a template for tumor molecular computed tomography (CT) imaging technique. The formed multifunctional cysteamine-folic acid conjugated gold nanoparticles (FA-Cys-AuNPs) were characterized via different techniques. Colony assay, hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), MTT, and flow cytometry analysis were used to evaluate the cytocompatibility of the particles. We showed that the formed FA-Cys-AuNPs with an Au core size of ~15 nm are non-cytotoxic in a given concentration range and revealed greater X-ray attenuation intensity than iodine-based contrast agent under the same concentration of the active element. At 80 kVp, FA-Cys-AuNPs enable 1.77-times greater contrast per unit mass compared with iodine at a concentration of 2000 μg/ml, and importantly, the developed FA-Cys-AuNPs can be used as a contrast media for targeted CT imaging of folic acid receptor-expressing cancer cells in vitro. CT values of the targeted cells were 2-times higher than that of non-targeted cells at 80 kVp. These findings propose that the designed FA-Cys-AuNPs can be used as a promising contrast agent for molecular CT imaging. This data can be also considered for the application of gold nanostructures in radiation dose enhancement where nanoparticles with high X-ray attenuation are applied.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]