A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Functionalization of graphene oxide nanostructures improves photoluminescence and facilitates their use as optical probes in preclinical imaging
Authors: Prabhakar N, Nareoja T, von Haartman E, Sen Karaman D, Burikov SA, Dolenko TA, Deguchi T, Mamaeva V, Hänninen PE, Vlasov II, Shenderova OA, Rosenholm JM
Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry
Publication year: 2015
Journal: Nanoscale
Journal name in source: NANOSCALE
Journal acronym: NANOSCALE
Volume: 7
Issue: 23
First page : 10410
Last page: 10420
Number of pages: 11
ISSN: 2040-3364
eISSN: 2040-3372
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/c5nr01403d
Recently reported photoluminescent nanographene oxides (nGOs), i.e. nanographene oxidised with a sulfuric/nitric acid mixture (SNOx method), have tuneable photoluminescence and are scalable, simple and fast to produce optical probes. This material belongs to the vast class of photoluminescent carbon nanostructures, including carbon dots, nanodiamonds (NDs), graphene quantum dots (GQDs), all of which demonstrate a variety of properties that are attractive for biomedical imaging such as low toxicity and stable photoluminescence. In this study, the nGOs were organically surface-modified with poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(ethylene imine) (PEG-PEI) copolymers tagged with folic acid as the affinity ligand for cancer cells expressing folate receptors. The functionalization enhanced both the cellular uptake and quantum efficiency of the photoluminescence as compared to non-modified nGOs. The nGOs exhibited an excitation dependent photoluminescence that facilitated their detection with a wide range of microscope configurations. The functionalized nGOs were non-toxic, they were retained in the stained cell population over a period of 8 days and they were distributed equally between daughter cells. We have evaluated their applicability in in vitro and in vivo (chicken embryo CAM) models to visualize and track migratory cancer cells. The good biocompatibility and easy detection of the functionalized nGOs suggest that they could address the limitations faced with quantum dots and organic fluorophores in long-term in vivo biomedical imaging.