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Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO
Faraday Discussions, Volume: 186, Pages: 77 - 93
Swansea University Authors: Yon Ju-Nam , Jesus Ojeda Ledo
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DOI (Published version): 10.1039/C5FD00131E
Abstract
In this work, we report the synthesis of novel cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles dispersible in water and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) for their potential use in biomedical applications. All the cationic-functionalising ligands currently reported in the literature are ammonium-based species. Here...
Published in: | Faraday Discussions |
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ISSN: | 1359-6640 1364-5498 |
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2016
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa24082 |
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2020-05-22T13:55:57.7550932 v2 24082 2015-10-30 Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO b219fdfea246d96dfc9c4eecfd60f2a6 0000-0003-2972-8073 Yon Ju-Nam Yon Ju-Nam true false 4c1c9800dffa623353dff0ab1271be64 0000-0002-2046-1010 Jesus Ojeda Ledo Jesus Ojeda Ledo true false 2015-10-30 CHEG In this work, we report the synthesis of novel cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles dispersible in water and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) for their potential use in biomedical applications. All the cationic-functionalising ligands currently reported in the literature are ammonium-based species. Here, the synthesis and characterisation of an alternative system, based on phosphonioalkylthiosulfate zwitterions and phosphonioalkylthioacetate were carried out. We have also demonstrated that our phosphonioalkylthiosulfate zwitterions readily disproportionate into phosphonioalkylthiolates in situ during the synthesis of gold nanoparticles produced by the borohydride reduction of gold(III) salts. The synthesis of the cationic gold nanoparticles using these phosphonium ligands was carried out in water and DMSO. UV-visible spectroscopic and TEM studies have shown that the phosphonioalkylthiolates bind to the surface of gold nanoparticles which are typically around 10 nm in diameter. The resulting cationic-functionalised gold nanoparticles are dispersible in aqueous media and in DMSO, which is the only organic solvent approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug carrier tests. This indicates their potential future use in biological applications. This work shows the synthesis of a new family of phosphonium-based ligands, which behave as cationic masked thiolate ligands in the functionalisation of gold nanoparticles. These highly stable colloidal cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles dispersed in water and DMSO can offer a great opportunity for the design of novel biorecognition and drug delivery systems. Journal Article Faraday Discussions 186 77 93 1359-6640 1364-5498 phosphonioalkylthiosulfate, phosphoniumalkylthioacetate, cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles, DMSO 15 4 2016 2016-04-15 10.1039/C5FD00131E COLLEGE NANME Chemical Engineering COLLEGE CODE CHEG Swansea University 2020-05-22T13:55:57.7550932 2015-10-30T15:34:44.1195260 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering Yon Ju-Nam 0000-0003-2972-8073 1 Jesus Ojeda Ledo 0000-0002-2046-1010 2 0024082-02032016230819.pdf FDpaper.pdf 2016-03-02T23:08:19.9300000 Output 756269 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2016-10-30T00:00:00.0000000 true |
title |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
spellingShingle |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO Yon Ju-Nam Jesus Ojeda Ledo |
title_short |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
title_full |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
title_fullStr |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
title_full_unstemmed |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
title_sort |
Highly stable noble metal nanoparticles dispersible in biocompatible solvents: synthesis of cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles in water and DMSO |
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b219fdfea246d96dfc9c4eecfd60f2a6 4c1c9800dffa623353dff0ab1271be64 |
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b219fdfea246d96dfc9c4eecfd60f2a6_***_Yon Ju-Nam 4c1c9800dffa623353dff0ab1271be64_***_Jesus Ojeda Ledo |
author |
Yon Ju-Nam Jesus Ojeda Ledo |
author2 |
Yon Ju-Nam Jesus Ojeda Ledo |
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Journal article |
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Faraday Discussions |
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186 |
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77 |
publishDate |
2016 |
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Swansea University |
issn |
1359-6640 1364-5498 |
doi_str_mv |
10.1039/C5FD00131E |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering |
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description |
In this work, we report the synthesis of novel cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles dispersible in water and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) for their potential use in biomedical applications. All the cationic-functionalising ligands currently reported in the literature are ammonium-based species. Here, the synthesis and characterisation of an alternative system, based on phosphonioalkylthiosulfate zwitterions and phosphonioalkylthioacetate were carried out. We have also demonstrated that our phosphonioalkylthiosulfate zwitterions readily disproportionate into phosphonioalkylthiolates in situ during the synthesis of gold nanoparticles produced by the borohydride reduction of gold(III) salts. The synthesis of the cationic gold nanoparticles using these phosphonium ligands was carried out in water and DMSO. UV-visible spectroscopic and TEM studies have shown that the phosphonioalkylthiolates bind to the surface of gold nanoparticles which are typically around 10 nm in diameter. The resulting cationic-functionalised gold nanoparticles are dispersible in aqueous media and in DMSO, which is the only organic solvent approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug carrier tests. This indicates their potential future use in biological applications. This work shows the synthesis of a new family of phosphonium-based ligands, which behave as cationic masked thiolate ligands in the functionalisation of gold nanoparticles. These highly stable colloidal cationic phosphonium gold nanoparticles dispersed in water and DMSO can offer a great opportunity for the design of novel biorecognition and drug delivery systems. |
published_date |
2016-04-15T03:28:31Z |
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1763751085875396608 |
score |
11.037581 |