Chunhong Dong
Tianjin University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chunhong Dong.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Xue Li; Wenbin Li; Qiuhua Yang; Xiaoqun Gong; Weisheng Guo; Chunhong Dong; Junqing Liu; Lixue Xuan; Jin Chang
Convenient and fast testing using an immunochromatography test strip (ICTS) enables rapid yes/no decisions regarding a disease to be made. However, the fundamental limitations of an ICTS, such as a lack of quantitative and sensitive analysis, severely hampers its application in reliable medical testing for the early detection of cancer. Herein, we overcame these limitations by integrating an ICTS with quantum dot nanobeads (QD nanobeads), which were fabricated by encapsulating QDs within modified poly(tert-butyl acrylate-co-ethyl acrylate-co-methacrylic acid) and served as a robust signal-generating reagent for the ICTS. Prostate specific antigen (PSA) was used as a model analyte to demonstrate the performance of the QD nanobeads-based ICTS platform. Under optimized conditions, the concentration of PSA could be determined within 15 min with high sensitivity and specificity using only 40 μL of sample. The detection limit was enhanced by ∼12-fold compared with that of an ICTS that used QDs encapsulated by commercial 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid (QDs@MUA) as the signal-generating reagent. At the same time, the possible clinical utility of this approach was demonstrated by measurements recorded from PSA-positive patient specimens. Our data suggest that the QD nanobeads-based ICTS platform is not only rapid and low-cost but also highly sensitive and specific for use in quantitative point-of-care diagnostics; thus, it holds promise for becoming a part of routine medical testing for the early cancer of detection.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Zhongyun Liu; Chunhong Dong; Xiaomin Wang; Hanjie Wang; Wei Li; Jian Tan; Jin Chang
Self-assembled nanostructures based on amphiphilic protein-polymer conjugates have shown great advantages in the field of nanomedicine such as inherent biocompatibility with biosystems because of their excellent performance. Herein, a novel biodegradable protein-polymer conjugate was prepared by covalently linking the tailor-made hydrophobic maleimide-functionalized poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) to hydrophilic bovine serum albumin (BSA) via the maleimide-sulfhydryl coupling reaction. This protein-based conjugate with a biodegradable polyester was reported for the first time, and the obtained biohybrid displayed well-defined structure, excellent biocompatibility and low cytotoxicity, and self-assembly behaviors similar to those of the traditional amphiphilic small molecules and block copolymers. The amphiphilic BSA-PCL conjugate can self-assemble into a nanosized vesicle with a negative surface charge. Furthermore, the self-assembled vesicle based on the BSA-PCL conjugate was functionalized via linking targeting ligand cetuximab to its surface to enhance cell uptake, and the doxorubicin (DOX)-encapsulated cetuximab-functionalized vesicle exhibited enhanced antitumor activity compared with that of free DOX in vitro. These results indicate that the biodegradable protein-polymer conjugate based on BSA and PCL had great potential as a drug delivery vehicle for cancer therapy.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Hanjie Wang; Zhongyun Liu; Sheng Wang; Chunhong Dong; Xiaoqun Gong; Peiqi Zhao; Jin Chang
In clinic, the application of photodynamic therapy (PDT) in deep tissue is severely constrained by the limited penetration depth of visible light needed for activating the photosensitizer (PS). In this Article, a merocyanine 540 (MC540) and upconverting nanoparticle (UCN) coloaded functional polymeric liposome nanocarrier, (MC540 + UCN)/FPL, was designed and constructed successfully for solving this problem in PDT. Compared with the conventional approaches using UCNs absorbing PSs directly, the combination of UCN and polymeric liposome has unique advantages. The UCN core as a transducer can convert deep-penetrating near-infrared light to visible light for activating MC540. The functional polymeric liposome shell decorated with folate as a nanoshield can keep the UCN and MC540 stable, protect them from being attacked, and help them get into cells. The results show that (MC540 + UCN)/FPL is an individual nanosphere with an average size of 26 nm. MC540 can be activated to produce singlet oxygen successfully by upconverting fluorescence emitted from UCNs. After (MC540 + UCN)/FPL was modified with folate, the cell uptake efficiency increased obviously. More interestingly, in the PDT effect test, the (MC540 + UCN)/FPL nanocarrier further improved the inhibition effect on tumor cells by anchoring targeting folate and transactivating transduction peptide. Our data suggest that the (MC540 + UCN)/FPL nanocarrier may be a useful nanoplatform for future PDT treatment in deep-cancer therapy based on upconversion mechanism.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Zhongyun Liu; Na Chen; Chunhong Dong; Wei Li; Weisheng Guo; Hanjie Wang; Sheng Wang; Jian Tan; Yu Tu; Jin Chang
A simple, straightforward, and reproducible strategy for the construction of a near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence nanoprobe was developed by coating CuInS2/ZnS quantum dots (CIS/ZnS QDs) with a novel amphiphilic bioconjugate. The amphiphilic bioconjugate with a tailor-designed structure of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as the hydrophilic segment and poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) as the hydrophobic part was fabricated by chemical coupling the hydrophobic polymer chain to BSA via the maleimide-sulfhydryl reaction. By incorporating CIS/ZnS QDs into the hydrophobic cores of the self-assembly of BSA-PCL conjugate, the constructed NIR fluorescence nanoprobe exhibited excellent fluorescent properties over a wide pH range (pH 3-10) and a good colloidal stability in PBS buffer (pH = 7.4) with or without 10% fetal bovine serum. The presence of the outer BSA shell effectively reduced the nonspecific cellular binding and imparted high biocompatibility and low-toxicity to the probe. Moreover, the NIR fluorescence nanoprobe could be functionalized by conjugating cyclic Arg-Gly-Asp (cRGD) peptide, and the decorated nanoprobe was shown to be highly selective for targeted integrin αvβ3-overexpressed tumor cell imaging. The feasibility of the constructed NIR fluorescence probe in vivo application was further investigated and the results demonstrated its great potential for in vivo imaging. This developed protocol for phase transfer of the CIS/ZnS QDs was universal and applicable to other nanoparticles stabilized with hydrophobic ligands.
International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014
Hanjie Wang; Chunhong Dong; Peiqi Zhao; Sheng Wang; Zhongyun Liu; Jin Chang
The application of photodynamic therapy in deep tissue is constrained by some pending problems, such as the limited penetration depth of excitation light and lacking of targeting ability. In this paper, a new kind of lipid coated upconverting nanoparticles consisiting of upconerting nanocrystal core and targeted lipid polymer shell was first reported for NIR triggered photodynamic therapy and cell imaging simultaneously. The lipid coated upconverting nanoparticles offers advantages to overcome the problem mentioned above. The UCN core works as a transducer to convert deeply penetrating near-infrared light to visible lights for activating photosensitizer and cell fluorescence imaging simultaneously. The amphiphilic lipid polymer RGD peptide conjugated poly (maleic anhydride-alt-1-octadecene) grafted dioleoyl l-α-phosphatidylethanolamine (RGD-PMAO-DOPE) acts as a shield. It can protect the system from catching by RES and target the whole system to the lesions. The experiment results show that the lipid coated upconverting nanoparticle is individual nanosphere with an average size of 20 nm. The drug loading can reach 9%. After NIR exposed, the MC540 was activated to produce singlet oxygen (ROS) successfully by the upconverting fluorescence emitted from UCN. Importantly, compared with nanoparticle without RGD decoration, the lipid coated upconverting nanoparticle can co-deliver the MC540 and UCNs into the same cell with higher efficiency. Besides, the MC540 loaded UCN/RGD-PMAO-DOPE nanoparticles showed significant inhibitory effect on tumor cells after NIR shining. Our data suggests that MC540 loaded UCN/RGD-PMAO-DOPE nanoparticle may be a useful nanoplatform for future PDT treatment in deep-cancer therapy.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Chunhong Dong; Zhongyun Liu; Lei Zhang; Weisheng Guo; Xue Li; Junqing Liu; Hanjie Wang; Jin Chang
Inspired by the specificity of acid tumor microenvironment, we constructed a flexible charge-reversible near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence nanoprobe in response to tumor extracellular pH (pHe) for effective tumor-specific imaging. The nanoprobe consists of an NIR-emitted CuInS2/ZnS quantum dot (CIS/ZS QDs) core and a tailored lauric acid and 2,3-dimethylmaleic anhydride modified ε-polylysine (ε-PL-g-LA/DMA) shell, which provides not only a dense protective layer for the QDs but also the ability of pHe-induced positive charge-mediated endocytosis into tumor cells. The results showed that the QDs@ε-PL-g-LA/DMA nanoprobe with a uniform size of 40 nm had high chemical stability at pH 7.4 and excellent optical properties. Especially, it swiftly reversed its surface charge to positive in 20 min when exposed to pHe due to the cleavage of the β-carboxyl amide bond of ε-PL-g-LA/DMA. Moreover, the cell uptake of the pHe-sensitive QDs nanoprobe exposed at pH 6.8 into HeLa cells is much more significant than that at pH 7.4, which further verified the availability of the electrostatic adsorptive endocytosis facilitated targeting ability. The pHe-induced targeting imparted the QDs nanoprobe a broad targeting ability in a variety of solid tumors. Furthermore, as an effective alternative mechanism for tumor targeting, responsive charge reversion is also universally applicable to other cancer theranostics agent.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Ying Zhang; Chunhong Dong; Lin Su; Hanjie Wang; Xiaoqun Gong; Huiquan Wang; Junqing Liu; Jin Chang
Immunoassays based on the downconversion target materials (organic dyes or quantum dots) lead to fairly strong spectral interference between the coded signal and reporter signal, which seriously affects the detection accuracy and hampers their applications. In this work, a new kind of upconverting nanocrystals encoded magnetic microspheres (UCNMMs) were designed and prepared successfully to solve the problem mentioned above. The UCNMMs were obtained by incorporating magnetic Fe3O4 nanoparticles and upconverting nanocrystals with polystyrene microspheres. Due to that upconverting nanocrystals (UCNs) and reporter signals are excitated by near-infrared and UV/visible light separately, immunoassays based on UCNMMs do not occur optical spectral interferences. Furthermore, these new functionalized UCNMMs have excellent properties in binding biomolecules and fast separating, which would have large potential applications in multiplexed assays.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2016
Chunhong Dong; Zhongyun Liu; Junqing Liu; Changzhu Wu; Falko Neumann; Hanjie Wang; Monika Schäfer-Korting; Burkhard Kleuser; Jin Chang; Wenzhong Li; Nan Ma; Rainer Haag
Considering the critical role of mitochondria in the life and death of cells, non-invasive long-term tracking of mitochondria has attracted considerable interest. However, a high-performance mitochondria-specific labeling probe with high photostability is still lacking. Herein a highly photostable hyperbranched polyglycerol (hPG)-based near-infrared (NIR) quantum dots (QDs) nanoplatform is reported for mitochondria-specific cell imaging. Comprising NIR Zn-Cu-In-S/ZnS QDs as extremely photostable fluorescent labels and alkyl chain (C12 )/triphenylphosphonium (TPP)-functionalized hPG derivatives as protective shell, the tailored QDs@hPG-C12 /TPP nanoprobe with a hydrodynamic diameter of about 65 nm exhibits NIR fluorescence, excellent biocompatibility, good stability, and mitochondria-targeted ability. Cell uptake experiments demonstrate that QDs@hPG-C12 /TPP displays a significantly enhanced uptake in HeLa cells compared to nontargeted QDs@hPG-C12 . Further co-localization study indicates that the probe selectively targets mitochondria. Importantly, compared with commercial deep-red mitochondria dyes, QDs@hPG-C12 /TPP possesses superior photostability under continuous laser irradiation, indicating great potential for long-term mitochondria labeling and tracking. Moreover, drug-loaded QDs@hPG-C12 /TPP display an enhanced tumor cell killing efficacy compared to nontargeted drugs. This work could open the door to the construction of organelle-targeted multifunctional nanoplatforms for precise diagnosis and high-efficient tumor therapy.
Nanotechnology | 2014
Hanjie Wang; Sheng Wang; Zhongyun Liu; Chunhong Dong; Jiumin Yang; Xiaoqun Gong; Jin Chang
To date, the application of photodynamic therapy in deep tissue has been severely restricted by the limited penetration depth of excitation light, such as UV light and visible light. In this work, a protocol of upconverting crystal/dextran-g-DOPE nanocomplex (UCN/dextran-g-DOPE) was developed. The nanocomplex was assembled from the hydrophobic upconverting nanoparticle (UCN) core and hydrophilic lipid shell. The photosensitizer zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) loaded UCN/dextran-g-DOPE offers possibilities to overcome the problem mentioned above. The UCN core works as a transducer to convert deeply penetrating near-infrared light to visible light to activate ZnPc for photodynamic therapy. The dextran-g-DOPE lipid shell is used for loading ZnPc and protecting the whole system from nonspecific absorbance or corrosion during the transportation. The experiment results show that the nanocomplex is an individual sphere with an average size of 30 nm. The ZnPc was activated to produce singlet oxygen successfully by the upconverting fluorescence emitted from UCN. The nanocomplex has high fluorescence stability in alkaline or neutral buffer solutions. Importantly, the ZnPc loaded UCN/dextran-g-DOPE nanocomplex showed a significant inhibitory effect on tumor cells after NIR exposure. Our data suggest that a ZnPc loaded UCN/dextran-g-DOPE nanocomplex may be a useful nanoplatform for future PDT treatment in deep-cancer therapy based on the upconverting mechanism.
Chemical Communications | 2015
Sheng Wang; Lei Zhang; Chunhong Dong; Lin Su; Hanjie Wang; Jin Chang