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David A. Giljohann

Northwestern University

ORCID: 0000-0002-0996-0548

Publishes on Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, RNA Interference and Gene Delivery, Gold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and Applications. 73 papers and 12.2k citations.

73Publications
12.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Gold Nanoparticles for Biology and Medicine
David A. Giljohann, Dwight S. Seferos, Weston L. Daniel et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2010
Cited by 2.3k

Gold colloids have fascinated scientists for over a century and are now heavily utilized in chemistry, biology, engineering, and medicine. Today these materials can be synthesized reproducibly, modified with seemingly limitless chemical functional groups, and, in certain cases, characterized with atomic-level precision. This Review highlights recent advances in the synthesis, bioconjugation, and cellular uses of gold nanoconjugates. There are now many examples of highly sensitive and selective assays based upon gold nanoconjugates. In recent years, focus has turned to therapeutic possibilities for such materials. Structures which behave as gene-regulating agents, drug carriers, imaging agents, and photoresponsive therapeutics have been developed and studied in the context of cells and many debilitating diseases. These structures are not simply chosen as alternatives to molecule-based systems, but rather for their new physical and chemical properties, which confer substantive advantages in cellular and medical applications.

Oligonucleotide-Modified Gold Nanoparticles for Intracellular Gene Regulation
Cited by 2k

We describe the use of gold nanoparticle-oligonucleotide complexes as intracellular gene regulation agents for the control of protein expression in cells. These oligonucleotide-modified nanoparticles have affinity constants for complementary nucleic acids that are higher than their unmodified oligonucleotide counterparts, are less susceptible to degradation by nuclease activity, exhibit greater than 99% cellular uptake, can introduce oligonucleotides at a higher effective concentration than conventional transfection agents, and are nontoxic to the cells under the conditions studied. By chemically tailoring the density of DNA bound to the surface of gold nanoparticles, we demonstrated a tunable gene knockdown.

Nano-Flares:  Probes for Transfection and mRNA Detection in Living Cells
Dwight S. Seferos, David A. Giljohann, Haley D. Hill et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2007
Cited by 706

We demonstrate that novel oligonucleotide-modified gold nanoparticle probes hybridized to fluorophore-labeled complements can be used as both transfection agents and cellular “nano-flares” for detecting mRNA in living cells. Nano-flares take advantage of the highly efficient fluorescence quenching properties of gold, cellular uptake of oligonucleotide nanoparticle conjugates without the use of transfection agents, and the enzymatic stability of such conjugates, thus overcoming many of the challenges to creating sensitive and effective intracellular probes. Nano-flares exhibit high signaling, have low background fluorescence, and are sensitive to changes in the number of RNA transcripts present in cells.

Gene Regulation with Polyvalent siRNA−Nanoparticle Conjugates
David A. Giljohann, Dwight S. Seferos, Andrew E. Prigodich et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2009
Cited by 626Open Access

We report the synthesis and characterization of polyvalent RNA-gold nanoparticle conjugates (RNA-Au NPs), nanoparticles that are densely functionalized with synthetic RNA oligonucleotides and designed to function in the RNAi pathway. The particles were rationally designed and synthesized to be free of degrading enzymes, have a high surface loading of siRNA duplexes, and contain an auxiliary passivating agent for increased stability in biological media. The resultant conjugates have a half-life six times longer than that of free dsRNA, readily enter cells without the use of transfection agents, and demonstrate a high gene knockdown capability in a cell model.