Publications

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Baptista, P., E. Pereira, P. Eaton, G. Doria, A. Miranda, I. Gomes, P. Quaresma, and R. Franco. "Gold nanoparticles for the development of clinical diagnosis methods." Anal Bioanal Chem 391 (2008): 943-50. AbstractWebsite

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Baptista, Pedro Viana. "Gold nanobeacons: A potential nanotheranostics platform." Nanomedicine 9 (2014): 2247-50.Website
Baptista, P. V., M. Koziol-Montewka, J. Paluch-Oles, and al.et. "Gold-nanoparticle-probe-based assay for rapid and direct detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA in clinical samples." CLINICAL CHEMISTRY 52 (2006): 1433-1434. Abstract

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Baptista, P., E. Pereira, P. Eaton, and al.et. "Gold nanoparticles for the development of clinical diagnosis methods." ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY 391 (2008): 943-950. Abstract

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Baptista, Pedro, Eulália Pereira, Peter Eaton, Gonçalo Doria, Adelaide Miranda, Inês Gomes, Pedro Quaresma, and Ricardo Franco. "Gold Nanoparticles for the Development of Clinical Diagnosis Methods." Anal Bioanal Chem. 391 (2008): 943-950.
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Child, Hannah Winifred, Yulan Hernandez, João Conde, Margaret Mullin, Pedro V. Baptista, Jesus Maria de la Fuente, and Catherine C. Berry. "Gold nanoparticle-siRNA mediated oncogene knockdown at RNA and protein level, with associated gene effects." NANOMEDICINE 10 (2015): 2513-2525. AbstractWebsite

Aims: RNAi is a powerful tool for gene silencing that can be used to reduce undesirable overexpression of oncogenes as a novel form of cancer treatment. However, when using RNAi as a therapeutic tool there is potential for associated gene effects. This study aimed to utilize gold nanoparticles to deliver siRNA into HeLa cells. Results: Knockdown of the c-myc oncogene by RNAi, at the RNA, protein and cell proliferation level was achieved, while also identifying associated gene responses. Discussion: The gold nanoparticles used in this study present an excellent delivery platform for siRNA, but do note associated gene changes. Conclusion: The study highlights the need to more widely assess the cell physiological response to RNAi treatment, rather than focus on the immediate RNA levels.

Conde, João, João Rosa, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold-Nanobeacons as a Theranostic System for the Detection and Inhibition of Specific Genes." Nature Protocol Exchange (2013). AbstractWebsite

This protocol describes the synthesis and detailed calibration of a gold nanoparticle-based nanobeacon (Au-nanobeacon) as an innovative theranostic approach for detection and inhibition of sequence-specific DNA and RNA for in vitro and ex vivo applications. Under hairpin configuration, proximity to gold nanoparticles leads to fluorescence quenching; hybridization to a complementary target restores fluorescence emission due to the gold nanobeacons’ conformational reorganization that causes the fluorophore and the AuNP to part from each other. This concept can easily be extended and adapted to assist the in vitro evaluation of silencing potential of a given sequence to be later used for ex vivo gene silencing and RNAi approaches, with the ability to monitor real-time gene delivery action. The time range for the entire protocol is ~8 days, including synthesis, functionalization and calibration of Au-nanobeacons, RNAi and gene silencing assays.

Conde, João, João Rosa, Jesús M. de la Fuente, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold-nanobeacons for simultaneous gene specific silencing and intracellular tracking of the silencing events." Biomaterials 34 (2013): 2516-2523.
Conde, João, Miguel Larguinho, Ana Cordeiro, Luis R. Raposo, Pedro M. Costa, Susana Santos, Mário Diniz, Alexandra R. Fernandes, and Pedro Viana Baptista. "Gold-Nanobeacons for gene therapy: evaluation of genotoxicity, cell toxicity and proteome profiling analysis." Nanotoxicology 8 (2014): 521-532. AbstractWebsite

Antisense therapy is a powerful tool for post-transcriptional gene silencing suitable for down-regulating target genes associated to disease. Gold nanoparticles have been described as effective intracellular delivery vehicles for antisense oligonucleotides providing increased protection against nucleases and targeting capability via simple surface modification. We constructed an antisense gold-nanobeacon consisting of a stem-looped oligonucleotide double-labelled with 3′-Cy3 and 5′-Thiol-C6 and tested for the effective blocking of gene expression in colorectal cancer cells. Due to the beacon conformation, gene silencing was directly detected as fluorescence increases with hybridisation to target, which can be used to assess the level of silencing. Moreover, this system was extensively evaluated for the genotoxic, cytotoxic and proteomic effects of gold-nanobeacon exposure to cancer cells. The exposure was evaluated by two-dimensional protein electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometry to perform a proteomic profile and 3-(4,5-Dimethylthiazol-2-Yl)-2,5-Diphenyltetrazolium Bromide (MTT) assay, glutathione-S-transferase assay, micronucleus test and comet assay to assess the genotoxicity. This integrated toxicology evaluation showed that the proposed nanotheranostics strategy does not exhibit significant toxicity, which is extremely relevant when translating into in vivo systems.

Cordeiro, Milton, Fabio Ferreira Carlos, Pedro Pedrosa, Antonio Lopez, and Pedro Viana Baptista. "Gold Nanoparticles for Diagnostics: Advances towards Points of Care." Diagnostics 6 (2016). Abstract

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Cordeiro, Mílton, Fábio Ferreira Carlos, Pedro Pedrosa, António Lopez, and Pedro Viana Baptista. "Gold Nanoparticles for Diagnostics: Advances towards Points of Care." Diagnostics 6 (2016): 43. AbstractWebsite

The remarkable physicochemical properties of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have prompted developments in the exploration of biomolecular interactions with AuNP-containing systems, in particular for biomedical applications in diagnostics. These systems show great promise in improving sensitivity, ease of operation and portability. Despite this endeavor, most platforms have yet to reach maturity and make their way into clinics or points of care (POC). Here, we present an overview of emerging and available molecular diagnostics using AuNPs for biomedical sensing that are currently being translated to the clinical setting.

Cordeiro, Milton, Lara Carvalho, Joana Silva, Leonor Saúde, Alexandra R. Fernandes, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold nanobeacons for tracking gene silencing in Zebrafish." Nanomaterials (2017). AbstractWebsite

The use of gold nanoparticles for effective gene silencing has demonstrated its potential as a tool for gene expression experiments and for the treatment of several diseases. Here, we used a gold nanobeacon designed to specifically silence the enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP) mRNA in embryos of a fli-EGFP transgenic zebrafish line, while simultaneously allowing the tracking and localization of the silencing events via the beacon’s emission. Fluorescence imaging measurements demonstrated a decrease of the EGFP emission with a concomitant increase in the fluorescence of the Au-nanobeacon. Furthermore, microinjection of the Au-nanobeacon led to a negligible difference in mortality and malformations in comparison to the free oligonucleotide, indicating that this system is a biocompatible platform for the administration of gene silencing moieties. Together, these data illustrate the potential of Au-nanobeacons as tools for in vivo zebrafish gene modulation with low toxicity which may be used towards any gene of interest.

Costa, P., A. Amaro, A. Botelho, J. Inacio, and P. V. Baptista. "Gold nanoprobe assay for the identification of mycobacteria of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex." Clinical Microbiology and Infection 16 (2010): 1464-1469. Abstract

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Costa, Pedro, Ana Amaro, Ana Botelho, João Inácio, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold nanoprobes assay for identification of mycobacteria from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex." Clin Microbiol Infect. 16 (2010): 1464-1469.
Costa, P., A. Amaro, A. Botelho, J. Inácio, and P. V. Baptista. "Gold nanoprobe assay for the identification of mycobacteria of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex." Clin Microbiol Infect 16 (2010): 1464-9. AbstractWebsite

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Doria, G., M. Larguinho, J. T. Dias, E. Pereira, R. Franco, and P. V. Baptista. "Gold-silver-alloy nanoprobes for one-pot multiplex DNA detection." Nanotechnology 21 (2010): 255101. AbstractWebsite

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Fernandes, Alexandra R., and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gene Silencing Using Multifunctionalized Gold Nanoparticles for Cancer Therapy." Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) 1530 (2017): 319-336. Abstract

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Ferreira, D., D. Fontinha, C. Martins, D. Pires, A. R. Fernandes, and P. V. Baptista. "Gold Nanoparticles for Vectorization of Nucleic Acids for Cancer Therapeutics." Molecules 25 (2020). AbstractWebsite

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Franco, Ricardo, Pedro Pedrosa, Fábio Ferreira Carlos, Bruno Veigas, and Pedro Viana Baptista. "Gold Nanoparticles for DNA/RNA-Based Diagnostics." In Handbook of Nanoparticles, 1-25. Berlin: Springer, 2015. Abstract

The remarkable physicochemical properties of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have prompted development
in exploring biomolecular interactions with AuNPs-containing systems, pursuing biomedical applications
in diagnostics. Among these applications, AuNPs have been remarkably useful for the development of
DNA/RNA detection and characterization systems for diagnostics, including systems suitable for point of
need. Here, emphasis will be on available molecular detection schemes of relevant pathogens and their
molecular characterization, genomic sequences associated with medical conditions (including cancer),
mutation and polymorphism identification, and the quantification of gene expression.

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Gaspar, Jorge Francisco, Pedro Viana Baptista, and José Rueff. "Gold nanoparticle based systems in genetics." Current Pharmacogenomics 5 (2007): 39-47.
Giestas, Letícia, Vesselin Petrov, Pedro V. Baptista, and João Carlos Lima. "General FRET-based coding for application in multiplexing methods." Photochem. Photobiol. Sci. 8 (2009): 1130-1138.
Guirgis, Bassem S. S., Claudia Sa e Cunha, Ines Gomes, Miguel Cavadas, Isabel Silva, Goncalo Doria, Gregory L. Blatch, Pedro V. Baptista, Eulalia Pereira, Hassan M. E. Azzazy, Maria M. Mota, Miguel Prudencio, and Ricardo Franco. "Gold nanoparticle-based fluorescence immunoassay for malaria antigen detection." Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 402 (2012): 1019-1027. Abstract

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Koziol-Montewka, M., J. Paluch-Oles, and P. Baptista. Gold nanoparticle probe-based diagnostic system for rapid and sensitive detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis In Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Nice, France, 2006.
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Larguinho, Miguel, Rafaela Canto, Milton Cordeiro, Pedro Pedrosa, Andreia Fortuna, Raquel Vinhas, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold nanoprobe-based non-crosslinking hybridization for molecular diagnostics." Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics 15 (2015): 1355-1368. Abstract

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