| Literature DB >> 28703340 |
Sheng Wang1,2,3, Jing Lin1, Zhantong Wang3, Zijian Zhou3, Ruiliang Bai4, Nan Lu3, Yijing Liu3, Xiao Fu3, Orit Jacobson3, Wenpei Fan3, Junle Qu2, Siping Chen1, Tianfu Wang1, Peng Huang1, Xiaoyuan Chen3.
Abstract
Integration of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and other imaging modalities is promising to furnish complementary information for accurate cancer diagnosis and imaging-guided therapy. However, most gadolinium (Gd)-chelator MR contrast agents are limited by their relatively low relaxivity and high risk of released-Gd-ions-associated toxicity. Herein, a radionuclide-64 Cu-labeled doxorubicin-loaded polydopamine (PDA)-gadolinium-metallofullerene core-satellite nanotheranostic agent (denoted as CDPGM) is developed for MR/photoacoustic (PA)/positron emission tomography (PET) multimodal imaging-guided combination cancer therapy. In this system, the near-infrared (NIR)-absorbing PDA acts as a platform for the assembly of different moieties; Gd3 N@C80 , a kind of gadolinium metallofullerene with three Gd ions in one carbon cage, acts as a satellite anchoring on the surface of PDA. The as-prepared CDPGM NPs show good biocompatibility, strong NIR absorption, high relaxivity (r 1 = 14.06 mM-1 s-1 ), low risk of release of Gd ions, and NIR-triggered drug release. In vivo MR/PA/PET multimodal imaging confirms effective tumor accumulation of the CDPGM NPs. Moreover, upon NIR laser irradiation, the tumor is completely eliminated with combined chemo-photothermal therapy. These results suggest that the CDPGM NPs hold great promise for cancer theranostics.Entities:
Keywords: combination therapy; gadolinium metallofullerene; multimodal imaging; polydopamine; theranostics
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28703340 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201701013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849