Mingyue Cui
Soochow University (Suzhou)
18 Papers
14 Citations
Mingyue Cui is an academic researcher from Soochow University (Suzhou). The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Targeted Noninvasive Treatment of Choroidal Neovascularization by Hybrid Cell-Membrane-Cloaked Biomimetic Nanoparticles.
Manjing Li,Zhaojian Xu,Lu Zhang,Mingyue Cui,Manhui Zhu,Yang Guo,Rong Sun,Junfei Han,E Song,Yao He,Yuanyuan Su +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, a hybrid cell-membrane-cloaked nanoparticles for noninvasively targeted treatment of choroidal neovascularization (CNV) was developed.
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Multi-modal anti-counterfeiting and encryption enabled through silicon-based materials featuring pH-responsive fluorescence and room-temperature phosphorescence
TL;DR: In this paper, a kind of Si-based material, in which metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are in-situ growing on the surface of Si nanoparticles (SiNPs) assisted by microwave irradiation, is introduced.
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Hydrothermal Synthesis of Zinc-Doped Silica Nanospheres Simultaneously Featuring Stable Fluorescence and Long-Lived Room Temperature Phosphorescence.
Mingyue Cui,Manjing Li,Jinhua Wang,Runzhi Chen,Zhaojian Xu,Jingyang Wang,Junfei Han,Guyue Hu,Rong Sun,Xin Jiang,Bin Song,Yao He +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a kind of zinc-doped silica nanospheres (Zn@SiNSs) with stable fluorescence and long-lived room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) emission in aqueous phase is presented.
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Fluorescent Silicon Nanorods-Based Nanotheranostic Agents for Multimodal Imaging-Guided Photothermal Therapy
TL;DR: Gold nanoparticles-decorated fluorescent silicon nanorods featuring high photothermal conversion performance and good photothermal stability enable a total ablation of tumors and prolong the survival time of mice in imaging-guided tumor-targeted photothermal therapy.
Rapid and Accurate Detection of Lymph Node Metastases Enabled through Fluorescent Silicon Nanoparticles-Based Exosome Probes.
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper introduced SiNPs-based exosome (SiNPs@EXO) probes for distinguishing normal and metastatic SLNs, which are suitable for stable and long-term tracking of exosomes.
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