Fluorescence and Cytotoxicity of Cadmium Sulfide Quantum Dots Stabilized on Clay Nanotubes
Anna V. Stavitskaya,
Andrei A. Novikov,
Mikhail S. Kotelev,
Dmitry S. Kopitsyn,
Elvira V. Rozhina,
Ilnur R. Ishmukhametov,
Rawil F. Fakhrullin,
Evgenii V. Ivanov,
Yuri M. Lvov,
Vladimir A. Vinokurov
Affiliations
Anna V. Stavitskaya
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Andrei A. Novikov
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Mikhail S. Kotelev
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Dmitry S. Kopitsyn
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Elvira V. Rozhina
Bionanotechnology Lab, Institute of Fundamental Medicine and Biology, Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation, 420008
Ilnur R. Ishmukhametov
Bionanotechnology Lab, Institute of Fundamental Medicine and Biology, Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation, 420008
Rawil F. Fakhrullin
Bionanotechnology Lab, Institute of Fundamental Medicine and Biology, Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation, 420008
Evgenii V. Ivanov
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Yuri M. Lvov
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Vladimir A. Vinokurov
Functional Aluminosilicate Nanomaterials Lab, Gubkin University, Moscow 119991, Russia
Quantum dots (QD) are widely used for cellular labeling due to enhanced brightness, resistance to photobleaching, and multicolor light emissions. CdS and CdxZn1−xS nanoparticles with sizes of 6–8 nm were synthesized via a ligand assisted technique inside and outside of 50 nm diameter halloysite clay nanotubes (QD were immobilized on the tube’s surface). The halloysite–QD composites were tested by labeling human skin fibroblasts and prostate cancer cells. In human cell cultures, halloysite–QD systems were internalized by living cells, and demonstrated intense and stable fluorescence combined with pronounced nanotube light scattering. The best signal stability was observed for QD that were synthesized externally on the amino-grafted halloysite. The best cell viability was observed for CdxZn1−xS QD immobilized onto the azine-grafted halloysite. The possibility to use QD clay nanotube core-shell nanoarchitectures for the intracellular labeling was demonstrated. A pronounced scattering and fluorescence by halloysite–QD systems allows for their promising usage as markers for biomedical applications.