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Targeted Fluorescence Imaging and Biological Effects of Peptide Conjugated Quantum Dots on Pancreatic Cancer Cells

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Arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) peptide sequences exist in a variety of biological extracellular matrices and can specifically bind the cell-surface integrin αvβ3, which is overexpressed in cancer cells and plays important roles in tumor growth and invasion. Quantum dots (QDs) have been applied in the field of cell biology and can be physically conjugated to the surface of cancer cells for imaging. In this research, we developed QDs-RGD nanoparticles and investigated its application in pancreatic cancer cell imaging and its influence on the biological behavior of pancreatic cancer cells. The results of flow cytometric analysis showed that the αvβ3 receptor was markedly overexpressed on pancreatic cancer cells. In cellular uptake studies, the fluorescence signal of QDs-RGD nanoparticles in pancreatic cancer cells was higher than that of QDs without RGD conjugation, as determined by an inverted fluorescence microscope. Furthermore, the biological behavior of pancreatic cancer cells was affected by QDs-RGD nanoparticles, which inhibited proliferation, migration and invasion and induced G2-phase cell cycle arrest. With integrin αvβ3 as a target, QDs-RGD nanoparticles can generate high-quality images of pancreatic cancer cells and have immense potential for use in the targeted diagnosis and therapy of pancreatic cancer.

Keywords: Nanotechnology; Pancreatic Cancer; QDs-RGD

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Department of Radiology, Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center, Fudan University, Shanghai, 201508, China 2: Clinical Discipline of Chinese and Western Integrative Medicine, Graduate School of Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, 201203, China

Publication date: 01 March 2020

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  • Journal for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (JNN) is an international and multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal with a wide-ranging coverage, consolidating research activities in all areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology into a single and unique reference source. JNN is the first cross-disciplinary journal to publish original full research articles, rapid communications of important new scientific and technological findings, timely state-of-the-art reviews with author's photo and short biography, and current research news encompassing the fundamental and applied research in all disciplines of science, engineering and medicine.
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