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Development and bio-applications of nontoxic C-Dots | 10764
Drug Designing: Open Access

Drug Designing: Open Access
Open Access

ISSN: 2169-0138

+44 1223 790975

Development and bio-applications of nontoxic C-Dots


JOINT EVENT ON 3rd International Conference and Expo on DRUG DISCOVERY & DESIGNING and 9th Annual PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMICAL ANALYSIS CONGRESS

October 02-03, 2017 | Vienna, Austria

Roger M Leblanc

University of Miami, USA

Keynote: Drug Des

Abstract :

Carbon dots (C-Dots) have recently attracted enormous attention due to their unique properties. In this talk, the synthesis, characterization and bio-applications of a new type of nontoxic, water-soluble C-Dots will be presented. A major medical challenge one faces to treat central nervous system (CNS) related diseases is to cross the tight junctions between endothelial cells, which are known as bloodâ�?�?brain barrier (BBB). Recently, our in vivo experimental observations suggested that the transferrin conjugated C-Dots could enter the CNS of Zebrafish while C-Dots alone could not. Thanks to the abundant presence of carboxylic acids on the surface, C-Dots are easily conjugated with transferrin and anticancer drug doxorubicin. The system was then applied as a drug delivery system for the delivery of doxorubicin into cancerous cells. Our in vitro study showed greater uptake of the conjugates compared to free doxorubicin, the conjugates at 10 nM was significantly more cytotoxic than doxorubicin alone, reducing viability by 14~45 %, across multiple pediatric brain tumor cell lines. Accidents, disease and aging compromise the structural and physiological functions of bones, and in vivo bone imaging test is critical to identify, detect and diagnose bone related development and dysfunctions. Here we show that C-Dots with low quantum yield (â�?�?darkâ�?) bind to calcified bone structures of live Zebrafish larvae with high affinity and selectivity. Binding resulted in a strong enhancement of luminescence that was not observed in other tissues, including non-calcified endochondral elements. Retention of C-dots by bones was very stable, long lasting, and with no detectable toxicity. These observations support a novel and revolutionary use of C-Dots as highly specific bioagents for bone imaging and diagnosis, and as a potential bone-specific drug delivery carrier.

Biography :

Roger M Leblanc received a B.Sc. degree in Chemistry from Université Laval in 1964, followed by a PhD in Physical Chemistry in 1968. Then, he obtained a postdoc position at the Royal Institution of Great Britain for two years before moving to the University of Québec, Trois-Rivières, Canada, where he spent 20+ years of studying photobiophysics. He moved his research to the University of Miami in 1994. Dr. Leblanc is Professor and Chair of Chemistry Department at University of Miami. And his research interests are centered on biophotophysics, spectroscopy and surface chemistry and he has published more than 500 research articles related to these topics and has guided more than 100 PhD and M.Sc.

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