Synthesis and Characterization of Gold Chiral Nanoparticles Functionalized by a Chiral Drug

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Apr 30;13(9):1526. doi: 10.3390/nano13091526.

Abstract

Inorganic chiral nanoparticles are attracting more and more attention due to their peculiar optical properties and potential biological applications, such as bioimaging, therapeutics, and diagnostics. Among inorganic chiral nanoparticles, gold chiral nanostructures were demonstrated to be very interesting in this context, with good physical chemical stability and also the possibility to decorate the surface, improving biomedical application as the interaction with the bio-systems. Gold (Au) nanostructures were synthesized according to a seed-mediated procedure which envisages the use of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) as the capping agent and L- and D-cysteine to promote chirality. Au nanostructures have been demonstrated to have opposite circular dichroism signals depending on the amino acid enantiomer used during the synthesis. Then, a procedure to decorate the Au surface with penicillamine, a drug used for the treatment of Wilson's disease, was developed. The composite material of gold nanoparticles/penicillamine was characterized using electron microscopy, and the penicillamine functionalization was monitored by means of UV-Visible, Raman, and infrared spectroscopy, highlighting the formation of the Au-S bond. Furthermore, electron circular dichroism was used to monitor the chirality of the synthesized nanostructures and it was demonstrated that both penicillamine enantiomers can be successfully bonded with both the enantiomers of the gold nanostructures without affecting gold nanoparticles' chirality. The effective modification of nanostructures' surfaces via penicillamine introduction allowed us to address the important issue of controlling chirality and surface properties in the chiral nano-system.

Keywords: D-penicillamine; chiral nanostructures; circular dichroism; gold nanoparticles; spectroscopic characterization.

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the PRIN 2017 (protocol number 2017PBXPN4_003) and by “Research for Innovation” POR PUGLIA FESR-FSE 2014/2020 Ricerca Regione Puglia. D.V. acknowledges the Research Foundation—Flanders for his Ph.D. fellowship (FWO Grant No 1S45223N).