Luminescent biomimetic citrate-coated europiumdoped carbonated apatite nanoparticles for use in bioimaging: physico-chemistry and cytocompatibility
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Gómez- Morales, Jaime; Verdugo-Escamilla, Cristóbal; Fernández Penas, Raquel; Parra Milla, Carmen María; Drouet, Christophe; Maube-Bosc, Françoise; Oltolina, Francesca; Prat, María; Fernández Sánchez, Jorge FernandoEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Date
2018-01-10Referencia bibliográfica
Gómez Morales, J. et. al. RSC Adv., 2018, 8, 2385–2397. [https://doi.org/10.1039/C7RA12536D]
Sponsorship
Project Biomin-nanoapatite MAT2014-60533-R supported by Spanish MINEICO and cofunded by FEDER; Excellence Network of Crystallography and Crystallization “Factoría de Cristalización” FIS2015- 71928-REDC supported by Spanish MINEICO; Spanish MINEICO for his contract PTA2015-11103-IAbstract
Nanomedicine covers the application of nanotechnologies in medicine. Of particular interest is the setup of
highly-cytocompatible nanoparticles for use as drug carriers and/or for medical imaging. In this context,
luminescent nanoparticles are appealing nanodevices with great potential for imaging of tumor or other
targetable cells, and several strategies are under investigation. Biomimetic apatite nanoparticles
represent candidates of choice in nanomedicine due to their high intrinsic biocompatibility and to the
highly accommodative properties of the apatite structure, allowing many ionic substitutions. In this work,
the preparation of biomimetic (bone-like) citrate-coated carbonated apatite nanoparticles doped with
europium ions is explored using the citrate-based thermal decomplexing approach. The technique
allows the preparation of the single apatitic phase with nanosized dimensions only at Eu3+ doping
concentrations #0.01 M at some timepoints. The presence of the citrate coating on the particle surface
(as found in bone nanoapatites) and Eu3+ substituting Ca2+ is beneficial for the preparation of stable
suspensions at physiological pH, as witnessed by the z-potential versus pH characterizations. The
sensitized luminescence features of the solid particles, as a function of the Eu3+ doping concentrations
and the maturation times, have been thoroughly investigated, while those of particles in suspensions
have been investigated at different pHs, ionic strengths and temperatures. Their cytocompatibility is
illustrated in vitro on two selected cell types, the GTL-16 human carcinoma cells and the m17.ASC
murine mesenchymal stem cells. This contribution shows the potentiality of the thermal decomplexing
method for the setup of luminescent biomimetic apatite nanoprobes with controlled features for use in
bioimaging.