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Dive into the research topics where Zhanjun Gu is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhanjun Gu.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Mn2+ Dopant-Controlled Synthesis of NaYF4:Yb/Er Upconversion Nanoparticles for in vivo Imaging and Drug Delivery

Gan Tian; Zhanjun Gu; Liangjun Zhou; Wenyan Yin; Xiaoxiao Liu; Liang Yan; Shan Jin; Wenlu Ren; Gengmei Xing; Shoujian Li; Yuliang Zhao

Pure dark red emission (650-670 nm) of NaYF(4):Yb/Er upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) is achieved by manganese ions (Mn(2+)) doping. In addition, the Mn(2+)-doping can also control the crystalline phase and size of the resulting UCNPs simultaneously. Drug delivery studies suggest the promise of these UCNPs as drug carriers for intracellular drug delivery and eventually as a multifunctional nanoplatform for simultaneous diagnosis and therapy.


ACS Nano | 2014

High-Throughput Synthesis of Single-Layer MoS2 Nanosheets as a Near-Infrared Photothermal-Triggered Drug Delivery for Effective Cancer Therapy

Wenyan Yin; Liang Yan; Jie Yu; Gan Tian; Liangjun Zhou; Xiaopeng Zheng; Xiao Zhang; Yuan Yong; Juan Li; Zhanjun Gu; Yuliang Zhao

We report here a simple, high-yield yet low-cost approach to design single-layer MoS2 nanosheets with controllable size via an improved oleum treatment exfoliation process. By decorating MoS2 nanosheets with chitosan, these functionalized MoS2 nanosheets have been developed as a chemotherapeutic drug nanocarrier for near-infrared (NIR) photothermal-triggered drug delivery, facilitating the combination of chemotherapy and photothermal therapy into one system for cancer therapy. Loaded doxorubicin could be controllably released upon the photothermal effect induced by 808 nm NIR laser irradiation. In vitro and in vivo tumor ablation studies demonstrate a better synergistic therapeutic effect of the combined treatment, compared with either chemotherapy or photothermal therapy alone. Finally, MoS2 nanosheets can also be used as a promising contrast agent in X-ray computed tomography imaging due to the obvious X-ray absorption ability of Mo. As a result, the high-throughput oleum treatment exfoliation process could be extended for fabricating other 2D nanomaterials, and the NIR-triggered drug release strategy was encouraging for simultaneous imaging-guided cancer theranostic application.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Recent Advances in Design and Fabrication of Upconversion Nanoparticles and Their Safe Theranostic Applications

Zhanjun Gu; Liang Yan; Gan Tian; Shoujian Li; Zhifang Chai; Yuliang Zhao

Lanthanide (Ln) doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) have attracted enormous attention in the recent years due to their unique upconversion luminescent properties that enable the conversion of low-energy photons (near infrared photons) into high-energy photons (visible to ultraviolet photons) via the multiphoton processes. This feature makes them ideal for bioimaging applications with attractive advantages such as no autofluorescence from biotissues and a large penetration depth. In addition, by incorporating advanced features, such as specific targeting, multimodality imaging and therapeutic delivery, the application of UCNPs has been dramatically expanded. In this review, we first summarize the recent developments in the fabrication strategies of UCNPs with the desired size, enhanced and tunable upconversion luminescence, as well as the combined multifunctionality. We then discuss the chemical methods applied for UCNPs surface functionalization to make these UCNPs biocompatible and water-soluble, and further highlight some representative examples of using UCNPs for in vivo bioimaging, NIR-triggered drug/gene delivery applications and photodynamic therapy. In the perspectives, we discuss the need of systematically nanotoxicology data for rational designs of UCNPs materials, their surface chemistry in safer biomedical applications. The UCNPs can actually provide an ideal multifunctionalized platform for solutions to many key issues in the front of medical sciences such as theranostics, individualized therapeutics, multimodality medicine, etc.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Elimination of Photon Quenching by a Transition Layer to Fabricate a Quenching-Shield Sandwich Structure for 800 nm Excited Upconversion Luminescence of Nd3+ Sensitized Nanoparticles

Yeteng Zhong; Gan Tian; Zhanjun Gu; Yijun Yang; Lin Gu; Yuliang Zhao; Ying Ma; Jiannian Yao

Nd3+-sensitized quenching-shield sandwich-structured upconversion nanoparticles are reported, which exhibit highly efficient upconversion photoluminescence under excitation by an 800 nm continuous-wave laser. The transition-layer structure is essential to bridge energy transfer from the sensitizer to the activator and simultaneously block energy back-transfer from the activator to the sensitizer. These 800 nm-excited upconversion nanoparticles are a key step toward the development of upconversion nanophosphors for biological applications.


Small | 2013

Red‐Emitting Upconverting Nanoparticles for Photodynamic Therapy in Cancer Cells Under Near‐Infrared Excitation

Gan Tian; Wenlu Ren; Liang Yan; Shan Jian; Zhanjun Gu; Liangjun Zhou; Shan Jin; Wenyan Yin; Shoujian Li; Yuliang Zhao

Upconverting nanoparticles (UCNPs) have attracted considerable attention as potential photosensitizer carriers for photodynamic therapy (PDT) in deep tissues. In this work, a new and efficient NIR photosensitizing nanoplatform for PDT based on red-emitting UCNPs is designed. The red emission band matches well with the efficient absorption bands of the widely used commercially available photosensitizers (Ps), benefiting the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from UCNPs to the attached photosensitizers and thus efficiently activating them to generate cytotoxic singlet oxygen. Three commonly used photosensitizers, including chlorine e6 (Ce6), zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) and methylene blue (MB), are loaded onto the alpha-cyclodextrin-modified UCNPs to form Ps@UCNPs complexes that efficiently produce singlet oxygen to kill cancer cells under 980 nm near-infrared excitation. Moreover, two different kinds of drugs are co-loaded onto these nanoparticles: chemotherapy drug doxorubicin and PDT agent Ce6. The combinational therapy based on doxorubicin (DOX)-induced chemotherapy and Ce6-triggered PDT exhibits higher therapeutic efficacy relative to the individual means for cancer therapy in vitro.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Enhanced Red Emission from GdF3:Yb3+,Er3+ Upconversion Nanocrystals by Li+ Doping and Their Application for Bioimaging

Wenyan Yin; Lina Zhao; Liangjun Zhou; Zhanjun Gu; Xiaoxiao Liu; Gan Tian; Shan Jin; Liang Yan; Wenlu Ren; Gengmei Xing; Yuliang Zhao

Under 980 nm near-infrared (NIR) excitation, upconversion luminescent (UCL) emission of GdF(3):Yb,Er upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) synthesized by a simple and green hydrothermal process can be tuned from yellow to red by varying the concentration of dopant Li(+) ions. A possible mechanism for enhanced red upconverted radiation is proposed. A layer of silica was coated onto the surface of GdF(3):Yb,Er,Li UCNPs to improve their biocompatibility. The silica-coated GdF(3):Yb,Er,Li UCNPs show great advantages in cell labeling and in vivo optical imaging. Moreover, GdF(3) UCNPs also exhibited a positive contrast effect in T(1)-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These results suggest that the GdF(3) UCNPs could act as dual-modality biolabels for optical imaging and MRI.


Biomaterials | 2015

TPGS-stabilized NaYbF4:Er upconversion nanoparticles for dual-modal fluorescent/CT imaging and anticancer drug delivery to overcome multi-drug resistance

Gan Tian; Xiaopeng Zheng; Xiao Zhang; Wenyan Yin; Jie Yu; Dongliang Wang; Zhiping Zhang; Xiangliang Yang; Zhanjun Gu; Yuliang Zhao

Multi-drug resistance (MDR) is a major cause of failure in cancer chemotherapy. Tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate (TPGS) has been extensively investigated for overcoming MDR in cancer therapy because of its ability to inhibit P-glycoprotein (P-gp). In this work, TPGS was for the first time used as a new surface modifier to functionalize NaYbF4:Er upconversion nanoparticles (UNCPs) and endowed the as-prepared products (TPGS-UCNPs) with excellent water-solubility, P-gp inhibition capability and imaging-guided drug delivery property. After the chemotherapeutic drug (doxorubicin, DOX) loading, the as-formed composites (TPGS-UCNPs-DOX) exhibited potent killing ability for DOX-resistant MCF-7 cells. Flow-cytometric assessment and Western blot assay showed that the TPGS-UCNPs could potently decrease the P-gp expression and facilitate the intracellular drug accumulation, thus achieving MDR reversal. Moreover, considering that UCNPs process efficient upconversion emission and Yb element contained in UCNPs has strong X-ray attenuation ability, the as-obtained composite could also serve as a dual-modal probe for upconversion luminescence (UCL) imaging and X-ray computed tomography (CT) imaging, making them promising for imaging-guided cancer therapy.


ACS Nano | 2009

Aligned ZnO Nanorod Arrays Grown Directly on Zinc Foils and Zinc Spheres by a Low-Temperature Oxidization Method

Zhanjun Gu; M. Parans Paranthaman; Jun Xu; Zhengwei Pan

Vertically aligned, dense ZnO nanorod arrays were grown directly on zinc foils by a catalyst-free, low-temperature (450-500 degrees C) oxidization method. The zinc foils remain conductive even after the growth of ZnO nanorods on its surface. The success of this synthesis largely relies on the level of control over oxygen introduction. By replacing zinc foils with zinc microspheres, unique and sophisticated urchin-like ZnO nanorod assemblies can be readily obtained.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Recent Advances in Upconversion Nanoparticles‐Based Multifunctional Nanocomposites for Combined Cancer Therapy

Gan Tian; Xiao Zhang; Zhanjun Gu; Yuliang Zhao

Lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) have the ability to generate ultraviolet or visible emissions under continuous-wave near-infrared (NIR) excitation. Utilizing this special luminescence property, UCNPs are approved as a new generation of contrast agents in optical imaging with deep tissue-penetration ability and high signal-to-noise ratio. The integration of UCNPs with other functional moieties can endow them with highly enriched functionalities for imaging-guided cancer therapy, which makes composites based on UCNPs emerge as a new class of theranostic agents in biomedicine. Here, recent progress in combined cancer therapy using functional nanocomposites based on UCNPs is reviewed. Combined therapy referring to the co-delivery of two or more therapeutic agents or a combination of different treatments is becoming more popular in clinical treatment of cancer because it generates synergistic anti-cancer effects, reduces individual drug-related toxicity and suppresses multi-drug resistance through different mechanisms of action. Here, the recent advances of combined therapy contributed by UCNPs-based nanocomposites on two main branches are reviewed: i) photodynamic therapy and ii) chemotherapy, which are the two most widely adopted therapies of UCNPs-based composites. The future prospects and challenges in this emerging field will be also discussed.


Theranostics | 2015

Smart MoS2/Fe3O4 Nanotheranostic for Magnetically Targeted Photothermal Therapy Guided by Magnetic Resonance/Photoacoustic Imaging

Jie Yu; Wenyan Yin; Xiaopeng Zheng; Gan Tian; Xiao Zhang; Tao Bao; Xinghua Dong; Zhongliang Wang; Zhanjun Gu; Xiaoyan Ma; Yuliang Zhao

The ability to selectively destroy cancer cells while sparing normal tissue is highly desirable during the cancer therapy. Here, magnetic targeted photothermal therapy was demonstrated by the integration of MoS2 (MS) flakes and Fe3O4 (IO) nanoparticles (NPs), where MoS2 converted near-infrared (NIR) light into heat and Fe3O4 NPs served as target moiety directed by external magnetic field to tumor site. The MoS2/Fe3O4 composite (MSIOs) functionalized by biocompatible polyethylene glycol (PEG) were prepared by a simple two-step hydrothermal method. And the as-obtained MSIOs exhibit high stability in bio-fluids and low toxicity in vitro and in vivo. Specifically, the MSIOs can be applied as a dual-modal probe for T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) and photoacoustic tomography (PAT) imaging due to their superparamagnetic property and strong NIR absorption. Furthermore, we demonstrate an effective result for magnetically targeted photothermal ablation of cancer. All these results show a great potential for localized photothermal ablation of cancer spatially/timely guided by the magnetic field and indicated the promise of the multifunctional MSIOs for applications in cancer theranostics.

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Yuliang Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liang Yan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenyan Yin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Gan Tian

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiao Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liangjun Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xinghua Dong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jiannian Yao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaopeng Zheng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ying Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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