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      Glomerular Barrier Behaves As an Atomically Precise Bandpass Filter in a Sub-nanometer Regime

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          Abstract

          The glomerular filtration barrier is known as a “size cut-off” slit to retain nanoparticles or proteins larger than 6~8 nm in the body, and to rapidly excrete the smaller ones through the kidneys. However, in a sub-nm size regime, we found that this barrier behaved as an atomically precise “bandpass” filter to significantly slow down renal clearance of few-atom gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) with the same surface ligands but different sizes (Au 18, Au 15 and Au 10–11). Compared to Au 25 (~1.0 nm), just few-atom decreases in the size resulted in 4~9 times reductions in the renal clearance efficiency in the early elimination stage because the smaller AuNCs were more readily trapped by the glomerular glycocalyx than the larger ones. This unique in vivo nano-bio interaction in the sub-nm regime also slows down the extravasation of sub-nm AuNCs from normal blood vessels and enhances their passive targeting to cancerous tissues through enhanced permeability and retention effect. This discovery highlights the size precision in the body’s response to nanoparticles and opens a new pathway to develop nanomedicines for many diseases associated with glycocalyx dysfunction.

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          Most cited references25

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          Atomically Precise Colloidal Metal Nanoclusters and Nanoparticles: Fundamentals and Opportunities.

          Colloidal nanoparticles are being intensely pursued in current nanoscience research. Nanochemists are often frustrated by the well-known fact that no two nanoparticles are the same, which precludes the deep understanding of many fundamental properties of colloidal nanoparticles in which the total structures (core plus surface) must be known. Therefore, controlling nanoparticles with atomic precision and solving their total structures have long been major dreams for nanochemists. Recently, these goals are partially fulfilled in the case of gold nanoparticles, at least in the ultrasmall size regime (1-3 nm in diameter, often called nanoclusters). This review summarizes the major progress in the field, including the principles that permit atomically precise synthesis, new types of atomic structures, and unique physical and chemical properties of atomically precise nanoparticles, as well as exciting opportunities for nanochemists to understand very fundamental science of colloidal nanoparticles (such as the stability, metal-ligand interfacial bonding, ligand assembly on particle surfaces, aesthetic structural patterns, periodicities, and emergence of the metallic state) and to develop a range of potential applications such as in catalysis, biomedicine, sensing, imaging, optics, and energy conversion. Although most of the research activity currently focuses on thiolate-protected gold nanoclusters, important progress has also been achieved in other ligand-protected gold, silver, and bimetal (or alloy) nanoclusters. All of these types of unique nanoparticles will bring unprecedented opportunities, not only in understanding the fundamental questions of nanoparticles but also in opening up new horizons for scientific studies of nanoparticles.
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            Glutathione-protected gold clusters revisited: bridging the gap between gold(I)-thiolate complexes and thiolate-protected gold nanocrystals.

            Small gold clusters (approximately 1 nm) protected by molecules of a tripeptide, glutathione (GSH), were prepared by reductive decomposition of Au(I)-SG polymers at a low temperature and separated into a number of fractions by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Chemical compositions of the fractionated clusters determined previously by electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (Negishi, Y. et al. J.Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 6518) were reassessed by taking advantage of freshly prepared samples, higher mass resolution, and more accurate mass calibration; the nine smallest components are reassigned to Au10(SG)10, Au15(SG)13, Au18(SG)14, Au22(SG)16, Au22(SG)17, Au25(SG)18, Au29(SG)20, Au33(SG)22, and Au39(SG)24. These assignments were further confirmed by measuring the mass spectra of the isolated Au:S(h-G) clusters, where h-GSH is a homoglutathione. It is proposed that a series of the isolated Au:SG clusters corresponds to kinetically trapped intermediates of the growing Au cores. The relative abundance of the isolated clusters was correlated well with the thermodynamic stabilities against unimolecular decomposition. The electronic structures of the isolated Au:SG clusters were probed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and optical spectroscopy. The Au(4f) XPS spectra illustrate substantial electron donation from the gold cores to the GS ligands in the Au:SG clusters. The optical absorption and photoluminescence spectra indicate that the electronic structures of the Au:SG clusters are well quantized; embryos of the sp band of the bulk gold evolve remarkably depending on the number of the gold atoms and GS ligands. The comparison of these spectral data with those of sodium Au(I) thiomalate and 1.8 nm Au:SG nanocrystals (NCs) reveals that the subnanometer-sized Au clusters thiolated constitute a distinct class of binary system which lies between the Au(I)-thiolate complexes and thiolate-protected Au NCs.
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              Investigating the impact of nanoparticle size on active and passive tumor targeting efficiency.

              Understanding the principles governing the design of nanoparticles for tumor targeting is essential for the effective diagnosis and treatment of solid tumors. There is currently a poor understanding of how to rationally engineer nanoparticles for tumor targeting. Here, we engineered different-sized spherical gold nanoparticles to discern the effect of particle diameter on passive (poly(ethylene glycol)-coated) and active (transferrin-coated) targeting of MDA-MB-435 orthotopic tumor xenografts. Tumor accumulation of actively targeted nanoparticles was found to be 5 times faster and approximately 2-fold higher relative to their passive counterparts within the 60 nm diameter range. For 15, 30, and 100 nm, we observed no significant differences. We hypothesize that such enhancements are the result of an increased capacity to penetrate into tumors and preferentially associate with cancer cells. We also use computational modeling to explore the mechanistic parameters that can impact tumor accumulation efficacy. We demonstrate that tumor accumulation can be mediated by high nanoparticle avidity and are weakly dependent on their plasma clearance rate. Such findings suggest that empirical models can be used to rapidly screen novel nanomaterials for relative differences in tumor targeting without the need for animal work. Although our findings are specific to MDA-MB-435 tumor xenografts, our experimental and computational findings help to enrich knowledge of design considerations that will aid in the optimal engineering of spherical gold nanoparticles for cancer applications in the future.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101283273
                34218
                Nat Nanotechnol
                Nat Nanotechnol
                Nature nanotechnology
                1748-3387
                1748-3395
                27 July 2017
                11 September 2017
                November 2017
                11 March 2018
                : 12
                : 11
                : 1096-1102
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Texas at Dallas, 800 West Campbell Road, Richardson, Texas 75080, USA
                [2 ]Deparment of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA
                Author notes
                Article
                NIHMS894393
                10.1038/nnano.2017.170
                5679252
                28892099
                90a6690e-54dd-4a83-aff8-02d0382e561e

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                Nanotechnology
                Nanotechnology

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