Thiol modification of silicon-substituted hydroxyapatite nanocrystals facilitates fluorescent labelling and visualisation of cellular internalisation

Calcium phosphates are used widely as orthopaedic implants and in nanocrystalline form to enable the transfer of genetic material into cells. Despite widespread use, little is known about their fate after they have crossed the cell membrane. Here we present a method of surface modification of silico...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. B, Materials for biology and medicine Materials for biology and medicine, 2013-09, Vol.1 (35), p.4370-4378
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Richard L, Hadley, Martin J, Jiang, Peih Jeng, Rowson, Neil A, Mendes, Paula M, Rappoport, Joshua Z, Grover, Liam M
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container_end_page 4378
container_issue 35
container_start_page 4370
container_title Journal of materials chemistry. B, Materials for biology and medicine
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creator Williams, Richard L
Hadley, Martin J
Jiang, Peih Jeng
Rowson, Neil A
Mendes, Paula M
Rappoport, Joshua Z
Grover, Liam M
description Calcium phosphates are used widely as orthopaedic implants and in nanocrystalline form to enable the transfer of genetic material into cells. Despite widespread use, little is known about their fate after they have crossed the cell membrane. Here we present a method of surface modification of silicon-substituted hydroxyapatite (SiHA) through a silane group, which enables the engraftment of a fluorescent dye to facilitate real-time biological tracking. Surface modification of the nanocrystal surface was undertaken using (3-mercaptopropyl)trimethoxysilane (MPTS), which presented a thiol for the further attachment of a fluorophore. Successful modification of the surface was demonstrated using zeta potential measurements and fluorescence microscopy and the number of thiol groups at the surface was quantified using Ellman's reagent. In vitro experiments using the fluorescently modified particles enabled the discrimination of the calcium phosphate particulate from other biological debris following internalisation by a population of MC3T3 (pre-osteoblast) cells and the particles were shown to maintain fluorescence for 24 hours without quenching. The successful modification of the surface of SiHA with thiol groups offers the tantalising possibility of the intracellular growth factor delivery.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c3tb20775g
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source Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Biological
Calcium phosphate
Cellular
Fluorescence
Hydroxyapatite
Labelling
Nanocrystals
Thiols
title Thiol modification of silicon-substituted hydroxyapatite nanocrystals facilitates fluorescent labelling and visualisation of cellular internalisation
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