Ivan Rehor
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ivan Rehor.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Zhiqin Chu; Silu Zhang; Bokai Zhang; Chunyuan Zhang; Chia-Yi Fang; Ivan Rehor; Petr Cigler; Huan-Cheng Chang; Ge Lin; Ren-Bao Liu; Quan Li
Cellular fate of nanoparticles is vital to application of nanoparticles to cell imaging, bio-sensing, drug delivery, suppression of drug resistance, gene delivery, and cytotoxicity analysis. However, the current studies on cellular fate of nanoparticles have been controversial due to complications of interplay between many possible factors. By well-controlled experiments, we demonstrated unambiguously that the morphology of nanoparticles independently determined their cellular fate. We found that nanoparticles with sharp shapes, regardless of their surface chemistry, size, or composition, could pierce the membranes of endosomes that carried them into the cells and escape to the cytoplasm, which in turn significantly reduced the cellular excretion rate of the nanoparticles. Such features of sharp-shaped nanoparticles are essential for drug delivery, gene delivery, subcellular targeting, and long-term tracking. This work opens up a controllable, purely geometrical and hence safe, degree of freedom for manipulating nanoparticle-cell interaction, with numerous applications in medicine, bio-imaging, and bio-sensing.
Nanoscale | 2013
Jan Havlik; Vladimira Petrakova; Ivan Rehor; Vaclav Petrak; Michal Gulka; Jan Stursa; Jan Kucka; Jan Ráliš; Torsten Rendler; San-Yung Lee; Rolf Reuter; Joerg Wrachtrup; Miroslav Ledvina; Milos Nesladek; Petr Cigler
A novel approach for preparation of ultra-bright fluorescent nanodiamonds (fNDs) was developed and the thermal and kinetic optimum of NV center formation was identified. Combined with a new oxidation method, this approach enabled preparation of particles that were roughly one order of magnitude brighter than particles prepared with commonly used procedures.
Small | 2014
Ivan Rehor; Jitka Slegerova; Jan Kucka; Vladimira Petrakova; Marie Pierre Adam; François Treussart; Stuart Turner; Sara Bals; Pavel Sacha; Miroslav Ledvina; Amy M. Wen; Nicole F. Steinmetz; Petr Cigler
High pressure high temperature (HPHT) nanodiamonds (NDs) represent extremely promising materials for construction of fluorescent nanoprobes and nanosensors. However, some properties of bare NDs limit their direct use in these applications: they precipitate in biological solutions, only a limited set of bio-orthogonal conjugation techniques is available and the accessible material is greatly polydisperse in shape. In this work, we encapsulate bright 30-nm fluorescent nanodiamonds (FNDs) in 10-20-nm thick translucent (i.e., not altering FND fluorescence) silica shells, yielding monodisperse near-spherical particles of mean diameter 66 nm. High yield modification of the shells with PEG chains stabilizes the particles in ionic solutions, making them applicable in biological environments. We further modify the opposite ends of PEG chains with fluorescent dyes or vectoring peptide using click chemistry. High conversion of this bio-orthogonal coupling yielded circa 2000 dye or peptide molecules on a single FND. We demonstrate the superior properties of these particles by in vitro interaction with human prostate cancer cells: while bare nanodiamonds strongly aggregate in the buffer and adsorb onto the cell membrane, the shell encapsulated NDs do not adsorb nonspecifically and they penetrate inside the cells.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2015
Ivan Rehor; Karin L. Lee; Kevin Chen; Miroslav Hájek; Jan Havlik; Jana Lokajova; Milan Masat; Jitka Slegerova; Sourabh Shukla; Hamed Heidari; Sara Bals; Nicole F. Steinmetz; Petr Cigler
Targeted biocompatible nanostructures with controlled plasmonic and morphological parameters are promising materials for cancer treatment based on selective thermal ablation of cells. Here, core-shell plasmonic nanodiamonds consisting of a silica-encapsulated diamond nanocrystal coated in a gold shell are designed and synthesized. The architecture of particles is analyzed and confirmed in detail using electron tomography. The particles are biocompatibilized using a PEG polymer terminated with bioorthogonally reactive alkyne groups. Azide-modified transferrin is attached to these particles, and their high colloidal stability and successful targeting to cancer cells overexpressing the transferrin receptor are demonstrated. The particles are nontoxic to the cells and they are readily internalized upon binding to the transferrin receptor. The high plasmonic cross section of the particles in the near-infrared region is utilized to quantitatively ablate the cancer cells with a short, one-minute irradiation by a pulse 750-nm laser.
Archive | 2014
Jitka Slegerova; Ivan Rehor; Jan Havlik; Helena Raabova; Eva Muchová; Petr Cigler
In recent years, diamond nanoparticles have received a great deal of attention due to their unique photophysical and biological properties. Nanodiamonds (NDs) show low toxicity and are considered to be a highly biocompatible carbon nanomaterial useful in a wide range of applications. Thanks to their ability to accommodate nitrogen-vacancy (N-V) color centers, NDs are a prime example of non-photobleachable fluorescent labels and nanosensors. Here, we present a survey of ND applications in biology and medicine with an emphasis on bio-imaging. We focus on distinguishing the properties of detonation NDs and high-pressure high-temperature (HPHT) NDs and describing their physicochemical properties, structure and possible modifications by small molecules and biomolecules. We summarize and critically evaluate in vitro and in vivo data on ND toxicity and biocompatibility, cellular internalization, localization and targeting by surface-attached ligands. We discuss current achievements in bioimaging using fluorescent NDs and the potential of NDs in diagnostics and drug delivery.
Nanoscale | 2015
Jitka Slegerova; Miroslav Hájek; Ivan Rehor; František Sedlák; Jan Stursa; Martin Hruby; Petr Cigler
ChemPlusChem | 2014
Ivan Rehor; Hana Macková; Sergey K. Filippov; Jan Kucka; Jitka Slegerova; Stuart Turner; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Miroslav Ledvina; Martin Hruby; Petr Cigler
Diamond and Related Materials | 2014
Ivan Rehor; Petr Cigler
Nanoscale | 2015
Vladimira Petrakova; Ivan Rehor; Jan Stursa; M. Ledvina; Milos Nesladek; Petr Cigler
Small | 2014
Ivan Rehor; Jitka Slegerova; Jan Kucka; Vladimira Petrakova; Marie-Pierre Adam; François Treussart; Stuart Turner; Sara Bals; Pavel Šácha; Miroslav Ledvina; Amy M. Wen; Nicole F. Steinmetz; Petr Cigler