Ana gezinime geç Aramaya geç Ana içeriğe geç

Magnetic resonance and fluorescence imaging of doxorubicin-loaded nanoparticles using a novel in vivo model

  • Ahmet Erten
  • , Wolf Wrasidlo
  • , Miriam Scadeng
  • , Sadik Esener
  • , Robert M. Hoffman
  • , Michael Bouvet
  • , Milan Makale*
  • *Bu çalışma için yazışmadan sorumlu yazar
  • University of California at San Diego
  • AntiCancer, Inc.

Araştırma sonucu: Dergiye katkıMakalebilirkişi

47 Atıf (Scopus)

Özet

We report here the in vivo combined-modality imaging of multifunctional drug delivery nanoparticles. These dextran core-based stealth liposomal nanoparticles (nanosomes) contained doxorubicin, iron oxide for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast, and BODIPY for fluorescence. The particles were long-lived in vivo because of surface decoration with polyethylene glycol and the incorporation of acetylated lipids that were ultraviolet cross-linked for physical stability. We developed a rodent dorsal skinfold window chamber that facilitated both MRI and non-invasive optical imaging of nanoparticle accumulation in the same tumors. Chamber tumors were genetically labeled with DsRed-2, which enabled co-localization of the MR images, the red fluorescence of the tumor, and the blue fluorescence of the nanoparticles. The nanoparticle design and MR imaging developed with the window chamber were then extended to orthotopic pancreatic tumors expressing DsRed-2. The tumors were MR-imaged using iron oxide-dextran liposomes and by fluorescence to demonstrate the deep imaging capability of these nanoparticles. From the Clinical Editor: In vivo combined-modality imaging of multifunctional drug delivery nanoparticles is discussed in this proof of principle paper.

Orijinal dilİngilizce
Sayfa (başlangıç-bitiş)797-807
Sayfa sayısı11
DergiNanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology, and Medicine
Hacim6
Basın numarası6
DOI'lar
Yayın durumuYayınlandı - Ara 2010
Harici olarak yayınlandıEvet

Finansman

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

FinansörlerFinansör numarası
National Institutes of Health
National Cancer InstituteR01CA132971

    Parmak izi

    Magnetic resonance and fluorescence imaging of doxorubicin-loaded nanoparticles using a novel in vivo model' araştırma başlıklarına git. Birlikte benzersiz bir parmak izi oluştururlar.

    Alıntı Yap