PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dark field imaging of rattle-type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles in vitro and in vivo

2013-04-29
(Press-News.org) In recent years, metal nanoparticles have showed great application prospect in the field of biological imaging, cancer diagnosis and treatment due to its unique optical scattering and optical absorption properties. In many metal materials, gold nanoparticles have caused concerns in the field because of its simple preparation, easy to modify advantages. However, the poor stability in physiological fluids environment and the potential toxicity of gold nanoparticles always restricts its application in the biological field.

TANG Fangqiong and her group from Laboratory of Controllable Preparation and Application of Nanomaterials, Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences have been devoted to the controllable preparation of nanomaterials and biological applications. In recent years, they invented a method to fabricate silica nanoparticles with the special rattles-type structure named silica nanorattles (SNs) and developed the nanoparticles as drug delivery system, biological detection and catalytic. Their work, entitled "Dark field imaging of rattle-type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles in vitro and in vivo", was published in Chinese Science Bulletin 2013, Vol 58(7).

In this paper, the gold nanoparticles were ingeniously hybridized into the hollow cavity of silica nanorattles. Then, a new type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles (Silica nanorattles @ gold nanoparticles, SN @ GNs) was obtained. It has advantage as following, scale preparation, good stability in the physiological environment and reduce gold nanoparticles agglomeration. These particles remained the strong optical scattering of gold nanoparticles and plasma resonance properties which can be used in dark field imaging of cells and animal tissues in vivo (figure 1). And more important is the silica nanoshells significantly reduced the toxicity of gold nanoparticles in vivo, which increase the maximum tolerated dose to 200 mg/kg.

Above all, TANG group have developed a new type of composite nanoparticles combination of silica good biocompatibility and the optical properties of gold nanoparticles. It provides a new material and method for the application of nanomaterials in biological imaging and disease diagnosis. This research project was partially supported by a grant from the National High Technology Research and Development Program (2011 AA02A114) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (61178035, 61178035 and 61171049).



INFORMATION:



Corresponding author:

Tang Fangqiong
tangfq@mail.ipc.ac.cn

See the article: LIU TianLong, TAN LongFei, TANG Fangqiong et al. Dark field imaging of rattle-type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles in vitro and in vivo[J]. Chinese Science Bulletin, 2013, 58(7): 531-536 http://csb.scichina.com:8080/kxtb/CN/abstract/abstract510342.shtml

Science China Press Co., Ltd. (SCP) is a scientific journal publishing company of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). For 50 years, SCP takes its mission to present to the world the best achievements by Chinese scientists on various fields of natural sciences researches.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Treatment by naturopathic doctors shows reduction in cardiovascular risk factors

2013-04-29
Counselling and treatment with naturopathic care as well as enhanced usual care reduced the prevalence of metabolic syndrome, a risk factor for heart disease, by 17% over a year for participants in a randomized controlled trial published in CMAJ. Researchers enrolled 246 members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers at 3 study sites (Toronto, Vancouver and Edmonton) for a year-long clinical trial to determine whether naturopathic lifestyle counselling helped to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Of the total sample, 207 people completed the study. The control ...

Leadership emerges spontaneously during games

2013-04-29
Video game and augmented-reality game players can spontaneously build virtual teams and leadership structures without special tools or guidance, according to researchers. Players in a game that mixed real and online worlds organized and operated in teams that resembled a military organization with only rudimentary online tools available and almost no military background, said Tamara Peyton, doctoral student in information sciences and technology, Penn State. "The fact that they formed teams and interacted as well as they did may mean that game designers should resist ...

Growing new arteries, bypassing blocked ones

2013-04-29
New Haven, Conn. – Scientific collaborators from Yale School of Medicine and University College London (UCL) have uncovered the molecular pathway by which new arteries may form after heart attacks, strokes and other acute illnesses bypassing arteries that are blocked. Their study appears in the April 29 issue of Developmental Cell. Arteries form in utero and during development, but can also form in adults when organs become deprived of oxygen — for example, after a heart attack. The organs release a molecular signal called VEGF. Working with mice, the Yale-UCL team ...

Fertilizers provide mixed benefits to soil in 50-year Kansas study

2013-04-29
Fertilizing with inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus definitely improves crop yields, but does it also improve the soil? The latest study to tackle this question has yielded mixed results. While 50 years of inorganic fertilization did increase soil organic carbon stocks in a long-term experiment in western Kansas, the practice seemingly failed to enhance soil aggregate stability—a key indicator of soil structural quality that helps dictate how water moves through soil and soil's resistance to erosion. The results of the research, which was carried out in continuous corn ...

Rear seat design -- a priority for children's safety in cars

2013-04-29
2013 — A research report released today from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) provides specific recommendations for optimizing the rear seat of passenger vehicles to better protect its most common occupants — children and adolescents. By bringing technologies already protecting front seat passengers to the rear seat and modifying the geometry of the rear seat to better fit this age group, the US could achieve important reductions in serious injury and death. Motor vehicle crashes remain the leading cause of death for children older than 4 years and resulted ...

Scientists reach the ultimate goal -- controlling chirality in carbon nanotubes

2013-04-29
An ultimate goal in the field of carbon nanotube research is to synthesise single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) with controlled chiralities. Twenty years after the discovery of SWNTs, scientists from Aalto University in Finland, A.M. Prokhorov General Physics Institute RAS in Russia and the Center for Electron Nanoscopy of Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have managed to control chirality in carbon nanotubes during their chemical vapor deposition synthesis. Carbon nanotube structure is defined by a pair of integers known as chiral indices (n,m), in other words, ...

Postcode inequality for cancer diagnosis 'costs lives'

2013-04-29
Hundreds of women with breast cancer living in England's most deprived areas would have better survival rates if they were diagnosed at the same stage as those who lived in affluent areas. A new study led by the University of Leicester, working with colleagues from Public Health England and the University of Cambridge, investigated how much of a difference late-stage diagnosis had on women from deprived areas. The team calculated how many deaths would be postponed beyond 5 years from diagnosis if as many women in the more deprived areas were diagnosed at an earlier ...

Visitors and residents: Students' attitudes to academic use of social media

2013-04-29
University of Leicester-led research has shown that university students behave very differently when using social media as part of their academic learning. Some students happily use social networking to share information about their course with their peers, in a similar way to how they might talk to friends on Facebook. Others are much more targeted in their use of online tools – and will only log on to get the information they need, when they need it. Visitors and Residents: mapping student attitudes to academic use of social networks, published in the journal Learning, ...

Medicaid-insured children have limited access to dermatologists, SLU researchers find

2013-04-29
ST. LOUIS – A recent Saint Louis University study revealed that Medicaid-insured children with eczema, an inflammatory skin condition that affects 20 percent children in the United States, do not have easy access to dermatologists. "This is a complex problem and a major health disparity in our country," said Elaine Siegfried, M.D., professor of pediatrics at SLU and the principal investigator of the study. "Thirty percent of all children seen in primary care offices have a skin problem. It's an everyday issue." SLU researchers found that only 19 percent of all dermatologists ...

Older is wiser: Study shows software developers' skills improve over time

2013-04-29
There is a perception in some tech circles that older programmers aren't able to keep pace with rapidly changing technology, and that they are discriminated against in the software field. But a new study from North Carolina State University indicates that the knowledge and skills of programmers actually improve over time – and that older programmers know as much (or more) than their younger peers when it comes to recent software platforms. "We wanted to explore these perceptions of veteran programmers as being out of step with emerging technologies and see if we could ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Using AI to improve standard-of-care cardiac imaging 

Stanford researchers develop novel "scaffold-free" approach for treating damaged muscles

Qubits created using unexpected materials

Superconductor advance could unlock ultra-energy-efficient electronics

Closing your eyes might not help you hear better after all

New computational biology tool automates and standardizes genome sequencing analysis

Climate change is fueling disease outbreaks

Three anesthesia drugs all have the same effect in the brain, MIT researchers find

Violence against women who inject drugs

Math can tell you how to manage your eczema

Adherence to healthy lifestyle and risk of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals with hypertension

Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales

Thoughts don’t kill people, but study suggests options for keeping guns from doing so

Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate

Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way

Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy

Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP

Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure

Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments

New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria

PFAS exposure may weaken teens’ bones

Researchers develop promising new therapy for most common form of bone cancer in children and young adults

FAU-FWC Study: Endangered smalltooth sawfish make a comeback in a historical Florida nursery

Towards highly efficient selective hydrogenation: the role of single-atom catalysts

A theory of Alzheimer's disease linking amyloid beta and tau

Ultra-processed foods linked with serious heart problems

Routine blood pressure readings offer early insights on dementia risk

Shingles vaccine drastically cuts risk of serious cardiac events

A new bird species in Japan

[Press-News.org] Dark field imaging of rattle-type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles in vitro and in vivo