Anchoring effects of surface chemistry on gold nanorods: modulating autophagy†
Abstract
Gold nanorods (Au NRs) have been receiving extensive attention owing to their extremely attractive properties which make them suitable for various biomedical applications. Au NRs could induce nano-toxicity, but this problem could be turned into therapeutic potential through tuning autophagy. However, the autophagy-inducing activity and mechanism of Au NRs is still unclear. Here we showed that surface chemical modification can tune the autophagy-inducing activity of Au NRs in human lung adenocarcinoma A549 cells. CTAB-coated Au NRs induce remarkable levels of autophagy activity as evidenced by LC3-II conversion and p62 degradation, while PSS- and PDDAC-coated Au NRs barely induce autophagy. More importantly, we also demonstrated that the AKT-mTOR signaling pathway was responsible for CTAB-coated Au NRs-induced autophagy. We further showed that CTAB-coated Au NRs also induce autophagy in human fetal lung fibroblast MRC-5 cells in a time-dependent manner. This study unveils a previously unknown function for Au NRs in autophagy induction, and provides a new insight for designing surface modifications of Au NRs for biomedical applications.