Water‐Dispersible Candle Soot–Derived Carbon Nano‐Onion Clusters for Imaging‐Guided Photothermal Cancer Therapy

Diagnostic Imaging Temperature Water Hyperthermia, Induced 02 engineering and technology Phototherapy Carbon Nanostructures Polyethylene Glycols 3. Good health Photoacoustic Techniques Mice Soot Cell Line, Tumor Neoplasms Animals Humans Polyethyleneimine 0210 nano-technology
DOI: 10.1002/smll.201804575 Publication Date: 2019-02-14T08:06:15Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractHerein, water‐dispersible carbon nano‐onion clusters (CNOCs) with an average hydrodynamic size of ≈90 nm are prepared by simply sonicating candle soot in a mixture of oxidizing acid. The obtained CNOCs have high photothermal conversion efficiency (57.5%), excellent aqueous dispersibility (stable in water for more than a year without precipitation), and benign biocompatibility. After polyethylenimine (PEI) and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) modification, the resultant CNOCs‐PEI‐PEG have a high photothermal conversion efficiency (56.5%), and can realize after‐wash photothermal cancer cell ablation due to their ultrahigh cellular uptake (21.3 pg/cell), which is highly beneficial for the selective ablation of cancer cells via light‐triggered intracellular heat generation. More interestingly, the cellular uptake of CNOCs‐PEI‐PEG is so high that the internalized nanoagents can be directly observed under a microscope without fluorescent labeling. Besides, in vivo experiments reveal that CNOCs‐PEI‐PEG can be used for photothermal/photoacoustic dual‐modal imaging‐guided photothermal therapy after intravenous administration. Furthermore, CNOCs‐PEI‐PEG can be efficiently cleared from the mouse body within a week, ensuring their excellent long‐term biosafety. To the best of the authors' knowledge, the first example of using candle soot as raw material to prepare water‐dispersible onion‐like carbon nanomaterials for cancer theranostics is represented herein.
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