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The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy

There is still a need for synthetic approaches that are much faster, easier to scale up, more robust and efficient for generating gold(I)–thiolates that can be easily converted into gold–thiolate nanoclusters. Mechanochemical methods can offer significantly reduced reaction times, increased yields a...

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Autores principales: Deák, Andrea, Szabó, Pál T., Bednaříková, Vendula, Cihlář, Jaroslav, Demeter, Attila, Remešová, Michaela, Colacino, Evelina, Čelko, Ladislav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10277803/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37342159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2023.1178225
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author Deák, Andrea
Szabó, Pál T.
Bednaříková, Vendula
Cihlář, Jaroslav
Demeter, Attila
Remešová, Michaela
Colacino, Evelina
Čelko, Ladislav
author_facet Deák, Andrea
Szabó, Pál T.
Bednaříková, Vendula
Cihlář, Jaroslav
Demeter, Attila
Remešová, Michaela
Colacino, Evelina
Čelko, Ladislav
author_sort Deák, Andrea
collection PubMed
description There is still a need for synthetic approaches that are much faster, easier to scale up, more robust and efficient for generating gold(I)–thiolates that can be easily converted into gold–thiolate nanoclusters. Mechanochemical methods can offer significantly reduced reaction times, increased yields and straightforward recovery of the product, compared to the solution-based reactions. For the first time, a new simple, rapid and efficient mechanochemical redox method in a ball-mill was developed to produce the highly luminescent, pH-responsive Au(I)–glutathionate, [Au(SG)]( n ). The efficient productivity of the mechanochemical redox reaction afforded orange luminescent [Au(SG)]( n ) in isolable amounts (mg scale), usually not achieved by more conventional methods in solution. Then, ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters were prepared by pH-triggered dissociation of [Au(SG)]( n ). The pH-stimulated dissociation of the Au(I)–glutathionate complex provides a time-efficient synthesis of oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters, it avoids high-temperature heating or the addition of harmful reducing agent (e.g., carbon monoxide). Therefore, we present herein a new and eco-friendly methodology to access oligomeric glutathione-based gold nanoclusters, already finding applications in biomedical field as efficient radiosensitizers in cancer radiotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-102778032023-06-20 The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy Deák, Andrea Szabó, Pál T. Bednaříková, Vendula Cihlář, Jaroslav Demeter, Attila Remešová, Michaela Colacino, Evelina Čelko, Ladislav Front Chem Chemistry There is still a need for synthetic approaches that are much faster, easier to scale up, more robust and efficient for generating gold(I)–thiolates that can be easily converted into gold–thiolate nanoclusters. Mechanochemical methods can offer significantly reduced reaction times, increased yields and straightforward recovery of the product, compared to the solution-based reactions. For the first time, a new simple, rapid and efficient mechanochemical redox method in a ball-mill was developed to produce the highly luminescent, pH-responsive Au(I)–glutathionate, [Au(SG)]( n ). The efficient productivity of the mechanochemical redox reaction afforded orange luminescent [Au(SG)]( n ) in isolable amounts (mg scale), usually not achieved by more conventional methods in solution. Then, ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters were prepared by pH-triggered dissociation of [Au(SG)]( n ). The pH-stimulated dissociation of the Au(I)–glutathionate complex provides a time-efficient synthesis of oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters, it avoids high-temperature heating or the addition of harmful reducing agent (e.g., carbon monoxide). Therefore, we present herein a new and eco-friendly methodology to access oligomeric glutathione-based gold nanoclusters, already finding applications in biomedical field as efficient radiosensitizers in cancer radiotherapy. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10277803/ /pubmed/37342159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2023.1178225 Text en Copyright © 2023 Deák, Szabó, Bednaříková, Cihlář, Demeter, Remešová, Colacino and Čelko. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Chemistry
Deák, Andrea
Szabó, Pál T.
Bednaříková, Vendula
Cihlář, Jaroslav
Demeter, Attila
Remešová, Michaela
Colacino, Evelina
Čelko, Ladislav
The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title_full The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title_fullStr The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title_full_unstemmed The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title_short The first solid-state route to luminescent Au(I)—glutathionate and its pH-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric Au(10–12)(SG)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
title_sort first solid-state route to luminescent au(i)—glutathionate and its ph-controlled transformation into ultrasmall oligomeric au(10–12)(sg)(10–12) nanoclusters for application in cancer radiotheraphy
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10277803/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37342159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2023.1178225
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