Luminescent Citrate-Functionalized Terbium-Substituted Carbonated Apatite Nanomaterials: Structural Aspects, Sensitized Luminescence, Cytocompatibility, and Cell Uptake Imaging
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Gómez Morales, Jaime; Fernández Penas, Raquel; Acebedo Martínez, Francisco Javier; Romero Castillo, Ismael; Verdugo-Escamilla, Cristóbal; Choquesillo Lazarte, Duane; Degli Esposti, Lorenzo; Jiménez Martínez, Yaiza; Fernández Sánchez, Jorge Fernando; Iafisco, Michele; Boulaiz Tassi, HouriaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Carbonated-apatites Terbium-doping Citrate-functionalized Luminescence properties Cytocompatibility Intracellular uptake imaging
Date
2022-04-07Referencia bibliográfica
Gómez-Morales, J.; Fernández-Penas, R.; Acebedo-Martínez, F.J.; Romero-Castillo, I.; Verdugo-Escamilla, C.; Choquesillo-Lazarte, D.; Esposti, L.D.; Jiménez-Martínez, Y.; Fernández-Sánchez, J.F.; Iafisco, M.; et al. Luminescent Citrate-Functionalized Terbium-Substituted Carbonated Apatite Nanomaterials: Structural Aspects, Sensitized Luminescence, Cytocompatibility, and Cell Uptake Imaging. Nanomaterials 2022, 12, 1257. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ nano12081257]
Patrocinador
Andalucía-Consejería de Economía y Conocimiento/Project B-CTS-562-UGR20- RED2018-102574-T; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación y Universidades PGC2018-102047-B-I00; European Regional Development Fund; Agencia Estatal de InvestigaciónRésumé
This work explores the preparation of luminescent and biomimetic Tb3+-doped citrate-functionalized carbonated apatite nanoparticles. These nanoparticles were synthesized employing
a citrate-based thermal decomplexing precipitation method, testing a nominal Tb3+ doping concentration between 0.001 M to 0.020 M, and a maturation time from 4 h to 7 days. This approach
allowed to prepare apatite nanoparticles as a single hydroxyapatite phase when the used Tb3+
concentrations were (i) ≤ 0.005 M at all maturation times or (ii) = 0.010 M with 4 h of maturation. At higher Tb3+ concentrations, amorphous TbPO4
·nH2O formed at short maturation times,
while materials consisting of a mixture of carbonated apatite prisms, TbPO4
·H2O (rhabdophane)
nanocrystals, and an amorphous phase formed at longer times. The Tb3+ content of the samples
reached a maximum of 21.71 wt%. The relative luminescence intensity revealed an almost linear dependence with Tb3+ up to a maximum of 850 units. Neither pH, nor ionic strength, nor temperature
significantly affected the luminescence properties. All precipitates were cytocompatible against
A375, MCF7, and HeLa carcinogenic cells, and also against healthy fibroblast cells. Moreover, the
luminescence properties of these nanoparticles allowed to visualize their intracellular cytoplasmic
uptake at 12 h of treatment through flow cytometry and fluorescence confocal microscopy (green
fluorescence) when incubated with A375 cells. This demonstrates for the first time the potential
of these materials as nanophosphors for living cell imaging compatible with flow cytometry and
fluorescence confocal microscopy without the need to introduce an additional fluorescence dye.
Overall, our results demonstrated that Tb3+-doped citrate-functionalized apatite nanoparticles are
excellent candidates for bioimaging applications.