| Literature DB >> 23005348 |
Pubudu M Peiris1, Randall Toy, Elizabeth Doolittle, Jenna Pansky, Aaron Abramowski, Morgan Tam, Peter Vicente, Emily Tran, Elliott Hayden, Andrew Camann, Aaron Mayer, Bernadette O Erokwu, Zachary Berman, David Wilson, Harihara Baskaran, Chris A Flask, Ruth A Keri, Efstathios Karathanasis.
Abstract
While the enhanced permeability and retention effect may promote the preferential accumulation of nanoparticles into well-vascularized primary tumors, it is ineffective in the case of metastases hidden within a large population of normal cells. Due to their small size, high dispersion to organs, and low vascularization, metastatic tumors are less accessible to targeted nanoparticles. To tackle these challenges, we designed a nanoparticle for vascular targeting based on an α(v)β(3) integrin-targeted nanochain particle composed of four iron oxide nanospheres chemically linked in a linear assembly. The chain-shaped nanoparticles enabled enhanced "sensing" of the tumor-associated remodeling of the vascular bed, offering increased likelihood of specific recognition of metastatic tumors. Compared to spherical nanoparticles, the chain-shaped nanoparticles resulted in superior targeting of α(v)β(3) integrin due to geometrically enhanced multivalent docking. We performed multimodal in vivo imaging (fluorescence molecular tomography and magnetic resonance imaging) in a non-invasive and quantitative manner, which showed that the nanoparticles targeted metastases in the liver and lungs with high specificity in a highly aggressive breast tumor model in mice.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23005348 PMCID: PMC3487383 DOI: 10.1021/nn303833p
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881