| Literature DB >> 27593416 |
Liang Cheng1,2, Anyanee Kamkaew2, Sida Shen1, Hector F Valdovinos3, Haiyan Sun2, Reinier Hernandez2, Shreya Goel4, Teng Liu1, Cyrus R Thompson2, Todd E Barnhart3, Zhuang Liu5, Weibo Cai6,7,8,9.
Abstract
While position emission tomography (PET) is an important molecular imaging technique for both preclinical research and clinical disease diagnosis/prognosis, chelator-free radiolabeling has emerged as a promising alternative approach to label biomolecules or nanoprobes in a facile way. Herein, starting from bottom-up synthesized WS2 nanoflakes, this study fabricates a unique type of WS2 /WOx nanodots, which can function as inherent hard oxygen donor for stable radiolabeling with Zirconium-89 isotope (89 Zr). Upon simply mixing, 89 Zr can be anchored on the surface of polyethylene glycol (PEG) modified WS2 /WOx (WS2 /WOx -PEG) nanodots via a chelator-free method with surprisingly high labeling yield and great stability. A higher degree of oxidation in the WS2 /WOx -PEG sample (WS2 /WOx (0.4)) produces more electron pairs, which would be beneficial for chelator-free labeling of 89 Zr with higher yields, suggesting the importance of surface chemistry and particle composition to the efficiency of chelator-free radiolabeling. Such 89 Zr-WS2 /WOx (0.4)-PEG nanodots are found to be an excellent PET contrast agent for in vivo imaging of tumors upon intravenous administration, or mapping of draining lymph nodes after local injection.Entities:
Keywords: 89Zr-chelator-free; WS2/WOx nanodots; in vivo PET imaging; lymph node imaging; stability
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27593416 PMCID: PMC5093087 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201601696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281