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Vicente TT, Arsalani S, Quiel MS, Fernandes GSP, da Silva KR, Fukada SY, Gualdi AJ, Guidelli ÉJ, Baffa O, Carneiro AAO, Ramos AP, Pavan TZ. Improving the Theranostic Potential of Magnetic Nanoparticles by Coating with Natural Rubber Latex for Ultrasound, Photoacoustic Imaging, and Magnetic Hyperthermia: An In Vitro Study. Pharmaceutics 2024; 16:1474. [PMID: 39598597 PMCID: PMC11597301 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics16111474] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/30/2024] [Revised: 11/13/2024] [Accepted: 11/15/2024] [Indexed: 11/29/2024] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) have gained attention in theranostics for their ability to combine diagnostic imaging and therapeutic capabilities in a single platform, enhancing targeted treatment and monitoring. Surface coatings are essential for stabilizing MNPs, improving biocompatibility, and preventing oxidation that could compromise their functionality. Natural rubber latex (NRL) offers a promising coating alternative due to its biocompatibility and stability-enhancing properties. While NRL-coated MNPs have shown potential in applications such as magnetic resonance imaging, their effectiveness in theranostics, particularly magnetic hyperthermia (MH) and photoacoustic imaging (PAI), remains underexplored. METHODS In this study, iron oxide nanoparticles were synthesized via coprecipitation, using NRL as the coating agent. The samples were labeled by NRL amount used during synthesis: NRL-100 for 100 μL and NRL-400 for 400 μL. RESULTS Characterization results showed that NRL-100 and NRL-400 samples exhibited improved stability with zeta potentials of -27 mV and -30 mV, respectively and higher saturation magnetization values of 79 emu/g and 88 emu/g of Fe3O4. Building on these findings, we evaluated the performance of these nanoparticles in biomedical applications, including magnetomotive ultrasound (MMUS), PAI, and MH. NRL-100 and NRL-400 samples showed greater displacements and higher contrast in MMUS than uncoated samples (5, 8, and 9 µm) at 0.5 wt%. In addition, NRL-coated samples demonstrated an improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in PAI. SNR values were 24.72 (0.51), 31.44 (0.44), and 33.81 (0.46) dB for the phantoms containing uncoated MNPs, NRL-100, and NRL-400, respectively. Calorimetric measurements for MH confirmed the potential of NRL-coated MNPs as efficient heat-generating agents, showing values of 43 and 40 W/g for NRL-100 and NRL-400, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Overall, NRL-coated MNPs showed great promise as contrast agents in MMUS and PAI imaging, as well as in MH applications.
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Affiliation(s)
- Thiago T. Vicente
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Saeideh Arsalani
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
- UT Southwestern Medical Center, Biomedical Engineering Department, Dallas, TA 75235-7323, USA
| | - Mateus S. Quiel
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Guilherme S. P. Fernandes
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Keteryne R. da Silva
- Department of BioMolecular Sciences, FCFRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Professor Doutor Zeferino Vaz, sn, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (K.R.d.S.); (S.Y.F.)
| | - Sandra Y. Fukada
- Department of BioMolecular Sciences, FCFRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Professor Doutor Zeferino Vaz, sn, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (K.R.d.S.); (S.Y.F.)
| | - Alexandre J. Gualdi
- Department of Physics, Federal University of São Carlos, Rod. Washington Luiz, km 235, São Carlos 13565-905, São Paulo, Brazil;
| | - Éder J. Guidelli
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Oswaldo Baffa
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Antônio A. O. Carneiro
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
| | - Ana Paula Ramos
- Department of Chemistry, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil;
| | - Theo Z. Pavan
- Department of Physics, FFCLRP, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto 14040-901, São Paulo, Brazil; (T.T.V.); (S.A.); (M.S.Q.); (G.S.P.F.); (É.J.G.); (O.B.); (A.A.O.C.)
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Lyons S, Baile Pomares P, Vidal L, McGarry K, Morrin A, Brougham DF. Surface Potential Modulation in Boronate-Functionalized Magnetic Nanoparticles Reveals Binding Interactions: Toward Magnetophoretic Capture/Quantitation of Sugars from Extracellular Matrix. LANGMUIR : THE ACS JOURNAL OF SURFACES AND COLLOIDS 2023. [PMID: 37235552 DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.3c00462] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/28/2023]
Abstract
Phenylboronic acids (BAs) are important synthetic receptors that bind reversibly to cis-diols enabling their use in molecular sensing. When conjugated to magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles, BAs have potential for application in separations and enrichment. Realizing this will require a new understanding of their inherent binding modes and measurement of their binding capacity and their stability in/extractability from complex environments. In this work, 3-aminophenylboronic acid was functionalized to superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (MNPs, core diameter 8.9 nm) to provide stable aqueous suspensions of functionalized particles (BA-MNPs). The progress of sugar binding and its impact on BA-MNP colloidal stability were monitored through the pH-dependence of hydrodynamic size and zeta potential during incubation with a range of saccharides. This provided the first direct observation of boronate ionization pKa in grafted BA, which in the absence of sugar shifted to a slightly more basic pH than free BA. On exposure to sugar solutions under MNP-limiting conditions, pKa moved progressively to lower pH as maximum capacity was gradually attained. The pKa shift is shown to be greater for sugars with greater BA binding affinity, and on-particle sugar exchange effects were inferred. Colloidal dispersion of BA-MNPs after binding was shown for all sugars at all pHs studied, which enabled facile magnetic extraction of glucose from agarose and cultured extracellular matrix expanded in serum-free media. Bound glucose, quantified following magnetophoretic capture, was found to be proportional to the solution glucose content under glucose-limiting conditions expected for the application. The implications for the development of MNP-immobilized ligands for selective magnetic biomarker capture and quantitation from the extracellular environment are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- Stephen Lyons
- SFI Insight Centre for Data Analytics; National Centre for Sensor Research; School of Chemical Sciences, Dublin City University, Dublin 9, Ireland
| | - Paola Baile Pomares
- Departamento de Química Analítica, Nutrición y Bromatología, Instituto Universitario de Materiales, Universidad de Alicante, PO Box 99, 03080 Alicante, Spain
| | - Lorena Vidal
- Departamento de Química Analítica, Nutrición y Bromatología, Instituto Universitario de Materiales, Universidad de Alicante, PO Box 99, 03080 Alicante, Spain
| | - Katie McGarry
- School of Chemistry, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland
| | - Aoife Morrin
- SFI Insight Centre for Data Analytics; National Centre for Sensor Research; School of Chemical Sciences, Dublin City University, Dublin 9, Ireland
| | - Dermot F Brougham
- School of Chemistry, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland
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Shingte S, Phakatkar AH, McKiernan E, Nigoghossian K, Ferguson S, Shahbazian-Yassar R, Brougham DF. Correlating Magnetic Hyperthermia and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast Performance of Cubic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles with Crystal Structural Integrity. CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS : A PUBLICATION OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 2022; 34:10801-10810. [PMID: 36590705 PMCID: PMC9798828 DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.2c00708] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/08/2022] [Revised: 07/27/2022] [Indexed: 06/17/2023]
Abstract
Magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles have multiple biomedical applications in AC-field hyperthermia and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast enhancement. Here, two cubic particle suspensions are analyzed in detail, one suspension displayed strong magnetic heating and MRI contrast efficacies, while the other responded weakly. This is despite them having almost identical size, morphology, and colloidal dispersion. Aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy analysis confirmed that the spinel phase Fe3O4 was present in both samples and identified prominent crystal lattice defects for the weakly responding one. These are interpreted as frustrating the orientation of the moment within the cubic crystals. The relationship between crystal integrity and the moment magnitude and dynamics is elucidated for the case of fully dispersed single nanocubes, and its connection with the emergent hyperthermia and MRI contrast responses is established.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Abhijit H. Phakatkar
- Department
of Biomedical Engineering, University of
Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60607, United States
| | - Eoin McKiernan
- School
of Chemistry, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland
| | | | - Steven Ferguson
- School
of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland
| | - Reza Shahbazian-Yassar
- Department
of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60607-7042, United States
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Wychowaniec JK, Brougham DF. Emerging Magnetic Fabrication Technologies Provide Controllable Hierarchically-Structured Biomaterials and Stimulus Response for Biomedical Applications. ADVANCED SCIENCE (WEINHEIM, BADEN-WURTTEMBERG, GERMANY) 2022; 9:e2202278. [PMID: 36228106 PMCID: PMC9731717 DOI: 10.1002/advs.202202278] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/31/2022] [Revised: 09/12/2022] [Indexed: 06/16/2023]
Abstract
Multifunctional nanocomposites which exhibit well-defined physical properties and encode spatiotemporally-controlled responses are emerging as components for advanced responsive systems. For biomedical applications magnetic nanocomposite materials have attracted significant attention due to their ability to respond to spatially and temporally varying magnetic fields. The current state-of-the-art in development and fabrication of magnetic hydrogels toward biomedical applications is described. There is accelerating progress in the field due to advances in manufacturing capabilities. Three categories can be identified: i) Magnetic hydrogelation, DC magnetic fields are used during solidification/gelation for aligning particles; ii) additive manufacturing of magnetic materials, 3D printing technologies are used to develop spatially-encoded magnetic properties, and more recently; iii) magnetic additive manufacturing, magnetic responses are applied during the printing process to develop increasingly complex structural arrangement that may recapitulate anisotropic tissue structure and function. The magnetic responsiveness of conventionally and additively manufactured magnetic hydrogels are described along with recent advances in soft magnetic robotics, and the categorization is related to final architecture and emergent properties. Future challenges and opportunities, including the anticipated role of combinatorial approaches in developing 4D-responsive functional materials for tackling long-standing problems in biomedicine including production of 3D-specified responsive cell scaffolds are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- Jacek K. Wychowaniec
- School of ChemistryUniversity College DublinBelfieldDublin 4Ireland
- AO Research Institute DavosClavadelerstrasse 8Davos7270Switzerland
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Formation of hydrated PEG layers on magnetic iron oxide nanoflowers shows internal magnetisation dynamics and generates high in-vivo efficacy for MRI and magnetic hyperthermia. Acta Biomater 2022; 152:393-405. [PMID: 36007780 PMCID: PMC10141539 DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2022.08.033] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/24/2022] [Revised: 08/12/2022] [Accepted: 08/15/2022] [Indexed: 11/24/2022]
Abstract
Multicore magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles, nanoflowers (NFs), have potential biomedical applications as efficient mediators for AC-magnetic field hyperthermia and as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging due to their strong magnetic responses arising from complex internal magnetic ordering. To realise these applications amenable surface chemistry must be engineered that maintain particle dispersion. Here a catechol-derived grafting approach is described to strongly bind polyethylene glycol (PEG) to NFs and provide stable hydrogen-bonded hydrated layers that ensure good long-term colloidal stability in buffers and media even at clinical MRI field strength and high concentration. The approach enables the first comprehensive study into the MRI (relaxivity) and hyperthermic (SAR) efficiencies of fully dispersed NFs. The predominant role of internal magnetisation dynamics in providing high relaxivity and SAR is confirmed, and it is shown that these properties are unaffected by PEG molecular weight or corona formation in biological environments. This result is in contrast to traditional single core nanoparticles which have significantly reduced SAR and relaxivity upon PEGylation and on corona formation, attributed to reduced Brownian contributions and weaker NP solvent interactions. The PEGylated NF suspensions described here exhibit usable blood circulation times and promising retention of relaxivity in-vivo due to the strongly anchored PEG layer. This approach to biomaterials design addresses the challenge of maintaining magnetic efficiency of magnetic nanoparticles in-vivo for applications as theragnostic agents. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: : Application of multicore magnetic iron-oxide nanoflowers (NFs) as efficient mediators for AC-field hyperthermia and as contrast agents for MR imaging has been limited by lack of colloidal stability in complex media and biosystems. The optimized materials design presented is shown to reproducibly provide PEG grafted NF suspensions of exceptional colloidal stability in buffers and complex media, with significant hyperthermic and MRI utility which is unaffected by PEG length, anchoring group or bio-molecular adsorption. Deposition in the selected pancreatic model mirrors liposomal formulations providing a quantifiable probe of tissue-level liposome deposition and relaxivity is retained in the tumour microenvironment. Hence the biomaterials design addresses the longstanding challenges of maintaining the in vivo magnetic efficiency of nanoparticles as theragnostic agents.
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Brennan G, Bergamino S, Pescio M, Tofail SAM, Silien C. The Effects of a Varied Gold Shell Thickness on Iron Oxide Nanoparticle Cores in Magnetic Manipulation, T 1 and T 2 MRI Contrasting, and Magnetic Hyperthermia. NANOMATERIALS 2020; 10:nano10122424. [PMID: 33291591 PMCID: PMC7761797 DOI: 10.3390/nano10122424] [Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/19/2020] [Revised: 11/24/2020] [Accepted: 12/02/2020] [Indexed: 12/22/2022]
Abstract
Fe3O4–Au core–shell magnetic-plasmonic nanoparticles are expected to combine both magnetic and light responsivity into a single nanosystem, facilitating combined optical and magnetic-based nanotheranostic (therapeutic and diagnostic) applications, for example, photothermal therapy in conjunction with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) imaging. To date, the effects of a plasmonic gold shell on an iron oxide nanoparticle core in magnetic-based applications remains largely unexplored. For this study, we quantified the efficacy of magnetic iron oxide cores with various gold shell thicknesses in a number of popular magnetic-based nanotheranostic applications; these included magnetic sorting and targeting (quantifying magnetic manipulability and magnetophoresis), MRI contrasting (quantifying benchtop nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-based T1 and T2 relaxivity), and magnetic hyperthermia therapy (quantifying alternating magnetic-field heating). We observed a general decrease in magnetic response and efficacy with an increase of the gold shell thickness, and herein we discuss possible reasons for this reduction. The magnetophoresis speed of iron oxide nanoparticles coated with the thickest gold shell tested here (ca. 42 nm) was only ca. 1% of the non-coated bare magnetic nanoparticle, demonstrating reduced magnetic manipulability. The T1 relaxivity, r1, of the thick gold-shelled magnetic particle was ca. 22% of the purely magnetic counterpart, whereas the T2 relaxivity, r2, was 42%, indicating a reduced MRI contrasting. Lastly, the magnetic hyperthermia heating efficiency (intrinsic loss power parameter) was reduced to ca. 14% for the thickest gold shell. For all applications, the efficiency decayed exponentially with increased gold shell thickness; therefore, if the primary application of the nanostructure is magnetic-based, this work suggests that it is preferable to use a thinner gold shell or higher levels of stimuli to compensate for losses associated with the addition of the gold shell. Moreover, as thinner gold shells have better magnetic properties, have previously demonstrated superior optical properties, and are more economical than thick gold shells, it can be said that “less is more”.
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