| Literature DB >> 29266476 |
Shreya Goel1, Carolina A Ferreira2, Feng Chen3, Paul A Ellison4, Cerise M Siamof3, Todd E Barnhart4, Weibo Cai1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
A multifunctional core-satellite nanoconstruct is designed by assembling copper sulfide (CuS) nanoparticles on the surface of [89 Zr]-labeled hollow mesoporous silica nanoshells filled with porphyrin molecules, for effective cancer imaging and therapy. The hybrid nanotheranostic demonstrates three significant features: (1) simple and robust construction from biocompatible building blocks, demonstrating prolonged blood retention, enhanced tumor accumulation, and minimal long-term systemic toxicity, (2) rationally selected functional moieties that interact together to enable simultaneous tetramodal (positron emission tomography/fluorescence/Cerenkov luminescence/Cerenkov radiation energy transfer) imaging for rapid and accurate delineation of tumors and multimodal image-guided therapy in vivo, and (3) synergistic interaction between CuS-mediated photothermal therapy and porphyrin-mediated photodynamic therapy which results in complete tumor elimination within a day of treatment with no visible recurrence or side effects. Overall, this proof-of-concept study illustrates an efficient, generalized approach to design high-performance core-satellite nanohybrids that can be easily tailored to combine a wide variety of imaging and therapeutic modalities for improved and personalized cancer theranostics in the future.Entities:
Keywords: cancer theranostics; core-satellite nanoparticles; multimodal imaging; synergistic therapy
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29266476 PMCID: PMC5805572 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201704367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849