Publications

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Journal Article
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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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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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, 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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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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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.
Pedrosa, Pedro, Bruno Veigas, Diana Machado, Isabel Couto, Miguel Viveiros, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold nanoprobes for multi loci assessment of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis." Tuberculosis 94 (2014): 332-337. AbstractWebsite

Tuberculosis, still one of the leading human infectious diseases, reported 8.7 million new cases in 2011 alone. Also, the increasing rate of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB) and its treatment difficulties pose a serious public health threat especially in developing countries. Resistance to isoniazid and rifampicin, first line antibiotics, is commonly associated with point mutations in katG, inhA and rpoB genes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC). Therefore, the development of cheap, fast and simple molecular methods to assess susceptibility profiles would have a huge impact in the capacity of early diagnosis and treatment of MDRTB.

Gold nanoparticles functionalized with thiol-modified oligonucleotides (Au-nanoprobes) have shown the potential to provide a rapid and sensitive detection method for MTBC and single base mutations associated with antibiotic resistance, namely the characterization of the three most relevant codons in rpoB gene associated to rifampicin resistance. Here we extend the Au-nanoprobe approach towards discriminating specific mutations within inhA and rpoB genes in PCR amplified DNA from isolates. Using a multiplex PCR reaction for these two genes, it is possible to assess both loci in parallel, and extend the potential of the Au-nanoprobe method to MDRTB molecular characterization with special application in the most frequent Portuguese genotypes.

Vinhas, R., C. Correia, P. Ribeiro, A. Lourenco, A. Sousa, A. Fernandes, and P. Baptista. "GOLD NANOPROBES IN THE DIAGNOSTIC OF CHRONIC MYELOID LEUKEMIA: DETECTION OF THE E14A2 BCR-ABL TRANSCRIPT DIRECTLY IN RNA SAMPLES." Leukemia Research 39 (2015): S90. Abstract

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Pedrosa, Pedro, Raquel Vinhas, Alexandra Fernandes, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold Nanotheranostics: Proof-of-Concept or Clinical Tool?" Nanomaterials 5 (2015): 1853-1879. AbstractWebsite

Nanoparticles have been making their way in biomedical applications and personalized medicine, allowing for the coupling of diagnostics and therapeutics into a single nanomaterial—nanotheranostics. Gold nanoparticles, in particular, have unique features that make them excellent nanomaterials for theranostics, enabling the integration of targeting, imaging and therapeutics in a single platform, with proven applicability in the management of heterogeneous diseases, such as cancer. In this review, we focus on gold nanoparticle-based theranostics at the lab bench, through pre-clinical and clinical stages. With few products facing clinical trials, much remains to be done to effectively assess the real benefits of nanotheranostics at the clinical level. Hence, we also discuss the efforts currently being made to translate nanotheranostics into the market, as well as their commercial impact.

Veigas, Bruno, Jorge M. Jacob, Mafalda N. Costa, David S. Santos, Miguel Viveiros, Joao Inacio, Rodrigo Martins, Pedro Barquinha, Elvira Fortunato, and Pedro Viana Baptista. "Gold on paper-paper platform for Au-nanoprobe TB detection." Lab on a Chip 12 (2012): 4802-4808. Abstract

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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, 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.

Rosa, J., J. Conde, J. M. de la Fuente, J. C. Lima, and P. V. Baptista. "Gold-nanobeacons for real-time monitoring of RNA synthesis." Biosens Bioelectron 36 (2012): 161-7. AbstractWebsite

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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.
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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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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Martins, Pedro, João Jesus, Sofia Santos, Luis R. Raposo, Catarina Roma-Rodrigues, Pedro Viana Baptista, and Alexandra Fernandes. "Heterocyclic Anticancer Compounds: Recent Advances and the Paradigm Shift towards the Use of Nanomedicine’s Tool Box." Molecules (2015): 16852-16891. AbstractWebsite

The majority of heterocycle compounds and typically common heterocycle fragments present in most pharmaceuticals currently marketed, alongside with their intrinsic versatility and unique physicochemical properties, have poised them as true cornerstones of medicinal chemistry. Apart from the already marketed drugs, there are many other being investigated for their promising activity against several malignancies. In particular, anticancer research has been capitalizing on the intrinsic versatility and dynamic core scaffold of these compounds. Nevertheless, as for any other promising anticancer drugs, heterocyclic compounds do not come without shortcomings. In this review, we provide for a concise overview of heterocyclic active compounds and families and their main applications in medicine. We shall focus on those suitable for cancer therapy while simultaneously addressing main biochemical modes of action, biological targets, structure-activity relationships as well as intrinsic limitation issues in the use of these compounds. Finally, considering the advent of nanotechnology for effective selective targeting of drugs, we shall discuss fundamental aspects and considerations on nanovectorization of such compounds that may improve pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic properties of heterocycles.

Lenis-Rojas, O. A., A. R. Fernandes, C. Roma-Rodrigues, P. V. Baptista, F. Marques, D. Perez-Fernandez, J. Guerra-Varela, L. Sanchez, D. Vazquez-Garcia, M. Lopez Torres, A. Fernandez, and J. J. Fernandez. "Heteroleptic mononuclear compounds of ruthenium(II): synthesis, structural analyses, in vivo antitumor activity and in vivo toxicity on zebrafish embryost." Dalton Transactions 45 (2016): 19127-19140. Abstract

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Larguinho, Miguel, Pedro M. Costa, Gonçalo Sousa, Maria H. Costa, Mário S. Diniz, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Histopathological findings on Carassius auratus hepatopancreas upon exposure to acrylamide: correlation with genotoxicity and metabolic alterations." Journal of Applied Toxicology 34 (2014).
Martins, R., P. Baptista, L. Silva, L. Raniero, G. Doria, R. Franco, and E. Fortunato. "Identification of unamplified genomic DNA sequences using gold nanoparticle probes and a novel thin film photodetector." Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids 354 (2008): 2580-2584. Abstract

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Eaton, Peter, Goncalo Doria, Eulalia Pereira, Pedro Viana Baptista, and Ricardo Franco. "Imaging gold nanoparticles for DNA sequence recognition in biomedical applications." Ieee Transactions on Nanobioscience 6 (2007): 282-288. Abstract

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Raposo, L. R., C. Roma-Rodrigues, P. Faisca, M. Alves, J. Henriques, MC Carvalheiro, M. L. Corvo, P. V. Baptista, A. J. Pombeiro, and A. R. Fernandes. "Immortalization and characterization of a new canine mammary tumour cell line FR37-CMT." Veterinary and Comparative Oncology 15 (2017): 952-967. Abstract

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Svahn, Noora, Artur J. Moro, Catarina Roma-Rodrigues, Rakesh Puttreddy, Kari Rissanen, Pedro V. Baptista, Alexandra R. Fernandes, João Carlos Lima, and Laura Rodríguez. "The Important Role of the Nuclearity, Rigidity, and Solubility of Phosphane Ligands in the Biological Activity of Gold(I) Complexes." Chemistry – A European Journal 24 (2018): 14654-14667. AbstractWebsite

Abstract A series of 4-ethynylaniline gold(I) complexes containing monophosphane (1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane (pta; 2), 3,7-diacetyl-1,3,7-triaza-5-phosphabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane (3), and PR3, with R=naphthyl (4), phenyl (5), and ethyl (6)) and diphosphane (bis(diphenylphosphino)acetylene (dppa; 7), trans-1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethene (dppet; 8), 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane (dppe; 9), and 1,3-bis(diphenylphosphino)propane (dppp; 10)) ligands have been synthesized and their efficiency against tumor cells evaluated. The cytotoxicity of complexes 2–10 was evaluated in human colorectal (HCT116) and ovarian (A2780) carcinoma as well as in normal human fibroblasts. All the complexes showed a higher antiproliferative effect in A2780 cells, with the cytotoxicity decreasing in the following order 5>6=9=10>8>2>4>7>3. Complex 4 stands out for its very high selectivity towards ovarian carcinoma cells (IC50=2.3 μm) compared with colorectal carcinoma and normal human fibroblasts (IC50>100 μm), which makes this complex very attractive for ovarian cancer therapy. Its cytotoxicity in these cells correlates with the induction of the apoptotic process and an increase of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). The effects of the nuclearity, rigidity, and solubility of these complexes on their biological activity were also analyzed. X-ray crystal structure determination allowed the identification of short N−H⋅⋅⋅π contacts as the main driving forces for the three-dimensional packing in these molecules.