体内分布
粒径
表面电荷
纳米颗粒
纳米医学
分散性
化学
胶体金
生物物理学
药物输送
纳米技术
材料科学
放射化学
药理学
医学
体外
生物化学
物理化学
有机化学
生物
作者
Stephanie Hirn,Manuela Semmler‐Behnke,Carsten Schleh,Alexander Wenk,Jens Lipka,Martin Schäffler,Shinji Takenaka,Winfried Möller,Günter Schmid,Ulrich Simon,Wolfgang G. Kreyling
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ejpb.2010.12.029
摘要
Gold nanoparticles (GNP) provide many opportunities in imaging, diagnostics, and therapies of nanomedicine. Hence, their biokinetics in the body are prerequisites for specific tailoring of nanomedicinal applications and for a comprehensive risk assessment. We administered 198Au-radio-labelled monodisperse, negatively charged GNP of five different sizes (1.4, 5, 18, 80, and 200 nm) and 2.8 nm GNP with opposite surface charges by intravenous injection into rats. After 24 h, the biodistribution of the GNP was quantitatively measured by gamma-spectrometry. The size and surface charge of GNP strongly determine the biodistribution. Most GNP accumulated in the liver increased from 50% of 1.4 nm GNP to >99% of 200 nm GNP. In contrast, there was little size-dependent accumulation of 18–200 nm GNP in most other organs. However, for GNP between 1.4 nm and 5 nm, the accumulation increased sharply with decreasing size; i.e. a linear increase with the volumetric specific surface area. The differently charged 2.8 nm GNP led to significantly different accumulations in several organs. We conclude that the alterations of accumulation in the various organs and tissues, depending on GNP size and surface charge, are mediated by dynamic protein binding and exchange. A better understanding of these mechanisms will improve drug delivery and dose estimates used in risk assessment.
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