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Rubul Mout

Boston Children's Hospital

ORCID: 0000-0001-6125-5873

Publishes on Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, RNA Interference and Gene Delivery, Biosensors and Analytical Detection. 53 papers and 5.3k citations.

53Publications
5.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Surface functionalization of nanoparticles for nanomedicine
Rubul Mout, Daniel F. Moyano, Subinoy Rana et al.|Chemical Society Reviews|2012
Cited by 780

Control of interactions between nanoparticles and biosystems is essential for the effective utilization of these materials in biomedicine. A wide variety of nanoparticle surface structures have been developed for imaging, sensing, and delivery applications. In this research Highlight, we will emphasize advances in tailoring nanoparticle interfaces for implementation in nanomedicine.

Direct Cytosolic Delivery of CRISPR/Cas9-Ribonucleoprotein for Efficient Gene Editing
Cited by 561

Genome editing through the delivery of CRISPR/Cas9-ribonucleoprotein (Cas9-RNP) reduces unwanted gene targeting and avoids integrational mutagenesis that can occur through gene delivery strategies. Direct and efficient delivery of Cas9-RNP into the cytosol followed by translocation to the nucleus remains a challenge. Here, we report a remarkably highly efficient (∼90%) direct cytoplasmic/nuclear delivery of Cas9 protein complexed with a guide RNA (sgRNA) through the coengineering of Cas9 protein and carrier nanoparticles. This construct provides effective (∼30%) gene editing efficiency and opens up opportunities in studying genome dynamics.

Regulation of Macrophage Recognition through the Interplay of Nanoparticle Surface Functionality and Protein Corona
Cited by 340Open Access

Using a family of cationic gold nanoparticles (NPs) with similar size and charge, we demonstrate that proper surface engineering can control the nature and identity of protein corona in physiological serum conditions. The protein coronas were highly dependent on the hydrophobicity and arrangement of chemical motifs on NP surface. The NPs were uptaken in macrophages in a corona-dependent manner, predominantly through recognition of specific complement proteins in the NP corona. Taken together, this study shows that surface functionality can be used to tune the protein corona formed on NP surface, dictating the interaction of NPs with macrophages.