Near infrared (NIR) sensitive Au-Au(2)S nanoparticles are intensively being developed for biomedical applications including drug and gene delivery. Although all possible clinical applications will require compatibility of Au-Au(2)S nanoparticles with the biological milieu, their in vivo capabilities and limitations have not yet been explored. Au-Au(2)S nanoparticles and cisplatin-loaded Au-Au(2)S nanoparticles were successfully synthesized by the reduction of tetrachloroauric acid (HAuCl(4)) using sodium sulfide (Na(2)S), and cisplatin was loaded onto NIR sensitive Au-Au(2)S nanoparticles via an MUA (11-mercaptoundecanoic acid) layer. In this work, acute systemic toxicity in vivo, blood biochemistry assay, and tissue distribution in mice were carried out to further investigate the biocompatibility and biodistribution of these nanoparticles. The results from these studies demonstrated that both of nanoparticles (<200 microg/mL) might have a great advantage in biocompatibility and good biological safety.
Iron-dependent accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and lipid peroxidation plays key roles in ferroptosis, which has been an attractive strategy to kill tumor cells. However, the rapid annihilation of...
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