{"title":"金纳米颗粒在哺乳动物活细胞中的传递:一项重要综述。","authors":"Raphaël Lévy, Umbreen Shaheen, Yann Cesbron, Violaine Sée","doi":"10.3402/nano.v1i0.4889","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Functional nanomaterials have recently attracted strong interest from the biology community, not only as potential drug delivery vehicles or diagnostic tools, but also as optical nanomaterials. This is illustrated by the explosion of publications in the field with more than 2,000 publications in the last 2 years (4,000 papers since 2000; from ISI Web of Knowledge, 'nanoparticle and cell' hit). Such a publication boom in this novel interdisciplinary field has resulted in papers of unequal standard, partly because it is challenging to assemble the required expertise in chemistry, physics, and biology in a single team. As an extreme example, several papers published in physical chemistry journals claim intracellular delivery of nanoparticles, but show pictures of cells that are, to the expert biologist, evidently dead (and therefore permeable). To attain proper cellular applications using nanomaterials, it is critical not only to achieve efficient delivery in healthy cells, but also to control the intracellular availability and the fate of the nanomaterial. This is still an open challenge that will only be met by innovative delivery methods combined with rigorous and quantitative characterization of the uptake and the fate of the nanoparticles. This review mainly focuses on gold nanoparticles and discusses the various approaches to nanoparticle delivery, including surface chemical modifications and several methods used to facilitate cellular uptake and endosomal escape. We will also review the main detection methods and how their optimum use can inform about intracellular localization, efficiency of delivery, and integrity of the surface capping.</p>","PeriodicalId":74237,"journal":{"name":"Nano reviews","volume":"1 ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.3402/nano.v1i0.4889","citationCount":"200","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Gold nanoparticles delivery in mammalian live cells: a critical review.\",\"authors\":\"Raphaël Lévy, Umbreen Shaheen, Yann Cesbron, Violaine Sée\",\"doi\":\"10.3402/nano.v1i0.4889\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Functional nanomaterials have recently attracted strong interest from the biology community, not only as potential drug delivery vehicles or diagnostic tools, but also as optical nanomaterials. This is illustrated by the explosion of publications in the field with more than 2,000 publications in the last 2 years (4,000 papers since 2000; from ISI Web of Knowledge, 'nanoparticle and cell' hit). Such a publication boom in this novel interdisciplinary field has resulted in papers of unequal standard, partly because it is challenging to assemble the required expertise in chemistry, physics, and biology in a single team. As an extreme example, several papers published in physical chemistry journals claim intracellular delivery of nanoparticles, but show pictures of cells that are, to the expert biologist, evidently dead (and therefore permeable). To attain proper cellular applications using nanomaterials, it is critical not only to achieve efficient delivery in healthy cells, but also to control the intracellular availability and the fate of the nanomaterial. 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引用次数: 200
摘要
功能纳米材料不仅作为潜在的药物递送载体或诊断工具,而且作为光学纳米材料,近年来引起了生物界的强烈兴趣。该领域出版物的爆炸式增长说明了这一点,在过去两年中有超过2000篇出版物(2000年以来有4000篇论文;来自ISI Web of Knowledge,“纳米粒子和细胞”点击)。在这一新颖的跨学科领域,这样的出版热潮导致了论文的标准不平等,部分原因是在一个团队中汇集化学、物理和生物学所需的专业知识是一项挑战。举个极端的例子,几篇发表在物理化学期刊上的论文声称纳米颗粒可以在细胞内传递,但在生物学家看来,这些细胞的图片显然是死亡的(因此是可渗透的)。为了使纳米材料在细胞中得到适当的应用,不仅要在健康细胞中实现有效的递送,而且要控制纳米材料在细胞内的可用性和命运。这仍然是一个开放的挑战,只有通过创新的给药方法,结合对纳米颗粒的吸收和命运的严格和定量的表征,才能解决这个问题。本综述主要关注金纳米颗粒,并讨论了纳米颗粒递送的各种方法,包括表面化学修饰和几种用于促进细胞摄取和内体逃逸的方法。我们还将回顾主要的检测方法,以及它们的最佳使用如何告知细胞内定位、递送效率和表面盖层的完整性。
Gold nanoparticles delivery in mammalian live cells: a critical review.
Functional nanomaterials have recently attracted strong interest from the biology community, not only as potential drug delivery vehicles or diagnostic tools, but also as optical nanomaterials. This is illustrated by the explosion of publications in the field with more than 2,000 publications in the last 2 years (4,000 papers since 2000; from ISI Web of Knowledge, 'nanoparticle and cell' hit). Such a publication boom in this novel interdisciplinary field has resulted in papers of unequal standard, partly because it is challenging to assemble the required expertise in chemistry, physics, and biology in a single team. As an extreme example, several papers published in physical chemistry journals claim intracellular delivery of nanoparticles, but show pictures of cells that are, to the expert biologist, evidently dead (and therefore permeable). To attain proper cellular applications using nanomaterials, it is critical not only to achieve efficient delivery in healthy cells, but also to control the intracellular availability and the fate of the nanomaterial. This is still an open challenge that will only be met by innovative delivery methods combined with rigorous and quantitative characterization of the uptake and the fate of the nanoparticles. This review mainly focuses on gold nanoparticles and discusses the various approaches to nanoparticle delivery, including surface chemical modifications and several methods used to facilitate cellular uptake and endosomal escape. We will also review the main detection methods and how their optimum use can inform about intracellular localization, efficiency of delivery, and integrity of the surface capping.