| Literature DB >> 29881657 |
N V Srikanth Vallabani1, Sanjay Singh1.
Abstract
Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) are considered as chemically inert materials and, therefore, being extensively applied in the areas of imaging, targeting, drug delivery and biosensors. Their unique properties such as low toxicity, biocompatibility, potent magnetic and catalytic behavior and superior role in multifunctional modalities have epitomized them as an appropriate candidate for biomedical applications. Recent developments in the area of materials science have enabled the facile synthesis of Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) offering easy tuning of surface properties and surface functionalization with desired biomolecules. Such developments have enabled IONPs to be easily accommodated in nanocomposite platform or devices. Additionally, the tag of biocompatible material has realized their potential in myriad applications of nanomedicines including imaging modalities, sensing, and therapeutics. Further, IONPs enzyme mimetic activity pronounced their role as nanozymes in detecting biomolecules like glucose, and cholesterol etc. Hence, based on their versatile applications in biomedicine, the present review article focusses on the current trends, developments and future prospects of IONPs in MRI, hyperthermia, photothermal therapy, biomolecules detection, chemotherapy, antimicrobial activity and also their role as the multifunctional agent in diagnosis and nanomedicines.Entities:
Keywords: Cell labeling; Computed tomography; Feraheme; Magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic separation; Nanozymes; Theranostics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29881657 PMCID: PMC5984604 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-018-1286-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the multifunctional HSA-IONPs for triple active MRI/PET/NIRF imaging. The pyrolysis-derived IONPs were incubated with dopamine, after which the particles became moderately hydrophilic and could be doped into HSA matrices in a way similar to drug loading.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Xie et al. 2010) Copyright (2010) Elsevier
Fig. 2Fe3O4 NPs coated with inner silica and outer gold layers have been entrapped in polymeric micelles, decorated with folic acid moieties, and tested in vivo for photoacoustic and magnetic resonance imaging detection of ovarian cancer.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Monaco et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) American Chemical Society
Role of iron oxide nanoparticles in various imaging modalities
| Nanoparticle/material | Size (nm) | Applications/results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ferumoxytol (Feraheme) | 17–30 | Treatment for anemia in renal failure patients | Aghighi et al. ( |
| IONPs coated with HSA, Dopamine and labeled with 64Cu-DOTA and Cy5.5 | 15 | Used for in vivo tri-modality imaging where MRI used for the study of particle distribution pattern. Under PET imaging showed better signal to noise ratio. NIRF used for both in vivo and ex vivo fluorescence-based imaging | Xie et al. ( |
| Fluorescent MNPs | 10–40 | Used for cell imaging (biological imaging) | García et al. ( |
| JNPs (Au-Fe2C Janus nanoparticles) | 12 | Applied for triple-modal imaging (in vivo and in vitro) | Ju et al. ( |
| Lipophilic Core − Shell Fe3O4@SiO2@Au (Fe3O4 coated with inner silica and Au outer layer) | 157–222 | Results showed targeting of cancer cells through folate receptors. Dual imaging capability for detection of ovarian cancer using MRI, and PAI | Monaco et al. ( |
| GLUT1-Fe3O4 NPs (Glucose transporter antibody conjugated Fe3O4 NPs) | 10 | Differentiation of infantile hemangioma from vascular hemangioma through MRI imaging was realized | Sohn et al. ( |
| C-ESION (Citrate coated IONPs) | 3.5–4.5 | For both T1 and T2 contrast imaging, where C-ESION120 used for T1-weighted angiography and C-ESION140 for T2-weighted MRI imaging | Pellico et al. ( |
| PEG-GdIO (PEGylated Gd-doped iron oxide NPs) | 4.29–4.74 | Showed simultaneous T1–T2 dual-modal MRI imaging and efficient diagnosis of brain gliomas | Xiao et al. ( |
| Fe3O4@GCP | 10–22 | Suitable for T1 MRI contrast where T1 weighted images of mice liver were capture with a signal intensity of ~ 1.2 times more compared to control | Cha et al. ( |
| Ultra-small IONPs | 3–4 | For T1 contrast imaging using MRI | Bao et al. ( |
| Fe3O4@Au@Glc/CO2H NPs (Gold-Coated Iron Oxide Glyco-nanoparticles) | 6.1 | Can be used as multimodal contrast agent for CT, T2 weighted MRI and US imaging | Mónica Carril ( |
| BION (Dextran coated bismuth–iron oxide nanohybrid) | 5–15 | Biocompatible and biodegradable NPs used for CT and T2 weighted MRI imaging | Naha et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 | 10 | Used for ultrasonic breast imaging, also be applicable for multimodal MRI-ultrasound imaging | Perlman and Azhari ( |
| Gold-iron oxide NPs | 20–50 | Showed potential for multi-purpose imaging such as contrast agent for CT, T2 weighted MRI imaging and PAI | Reguera et al. ( |
| 64Cu-IONPs (64Cu and dextran coated IONPs) | 5 | Showed better contrast for in vivo PET-MR imaging | Torres Martin de Rosales et al. ( |
| 64Cu-TNP (IONPs as trireporter NPs) | 20 | Used for tri-modality NPs system (PET, MRI and fluorescence imaging) for direct detection of macrophages in inflammatory atherosclerosis | Nahrendorf et al. ( |
| cRGD-conjugated SPIO nanocarriers (cRGD-functionalized, DOX-conjugated, and 64Cu-labeled superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles) | 10 | Multifunctional NPs for tumor targeting through conjugated cRGD (tumor targeting ligand) and quantitative PET-MRI imaging | Yang et al. ( |
| Germanium-69-Labeled IONPs | 10 | Used for in vivo dual modality PET and MRI imaging | Chakravarty et al. ( |
Fig. 3Synthesised magnetic core–shell microgels for single step colorimetric detection of glucose.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Wu et al. 2015a) Copyright (2015) Royal Society of Chemistry
Fig. 4Prussian blue (PB), and the cyanometalate structural analogs, CuFe, FeCoFe, and FeCo, are examined as inorganic clusters that mimic the functions of peroxidases. Schematic showing PB NPs catalyzed oxidation of NADH by H2O2 to form NAD+ and chemiluminescence generation by the FeCo NPs catalyzed oxidation of luminol by H2O2.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Vazquez-Gonzalez et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) American Chemical Society
Fig. 5Schematic illustration of peroxidase-like activity and its controllability regulated by DNA of Cu(HBTC)–1/Fe3O4–AuNPs nanosheets.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Tan et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) Royal Society of Chemistry
Fig. 6Schematic illustration of Nafion/GOx/IONPs/SPCE biosensor for electrochemical based detection of glucose.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Nor et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) Elsevier
Summary of bio-sensing applications shown by iron oxide nanoparticles
| Nanoparticle/material | Size (nm) | Applications/results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microgel embedded IONP-GOx-HRP | ~ 200 | Exhibited peroxidase like activity. Colorimetric detection of glucose was carried in a single step at pH 5.5 | Wu et al. ( |
| Prussian blue FeCo NPs | 40–50 | PBNPs catalyzed the oxidation of NADH by H2O2 to form NAD+ (showed dehydrogenase like activity). FeCo NPs catalyzed chemiluminescence generation in presence of H2O2 and luminol (showed Peroxidase like activity). Glucose detection was performed using FeCo NPs | Vazquez-Gonzalez et al. ( |
| Cu(HBTC)-1/Fe3O4-AuNPs nanosheets with ssDNA | 5.99 ± 2.58 | Enhanced TMB oxidation was observed in presence of single stranded DNA. 2D bimetallic immobilized MOF nanosheets were applied for detection of H2O2 (2.86–71.43 nM range) and glucose (12.86 to 257.14 µM range) | Tan et al. ( |
| Fe3O4@SiO2/MWNT (SiO2 coated Fe3O4 NPs dispersed on Multiwalled-carbon nano tubes) | 5–15 | Biosensor was applied for detection of glucose (3 µM–14 mM range) and cholesterol (10 µM–4 mM range) | Ramaprabhu (2011) |
| FeNPs@Co3O4 (IONPs loaded in Co3O4 hollow nanocages) | 900 | Applied for glucose detection with a linear range of 0.5–30 µM (limit of detection was 0.05 µM) | Zhao ( |
| Fe3O4-nanoparticles-modified carbon paste electrodes | – | Creatinine was determined with a detection limit of 2.0 × 10−7 mol L−1 | Kacar et al. ( |
| Graphene oxide/Fe3O4 nanocomposite | 50 | Biosensor for determination of glucose, with a range of 0.5–10 mM | Wang ( |
| MWCNT doped with Ni, Zn, Fe | 10–50 | Serotonin was determined with a detection limit of 5.98 × 10−3 µM–62.8 µM | Fayemi et al. ( |
| Chitosan-IONPs with urease | – | Applicable for the detection of urea | Ali ( |
| IONPs | 19.5 | Fornara et al. ( | |
| Fe3O4 NPs | 13 ± 3.5 | ATP-mediated peroxidase like activity of Fe3O4 NPs was observed at pH 7.4. Glucose detection was carried in a single step at physiological pH with a colorimetric detection limit of 50 µM | Vallabani et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs with Fe3+ AMP shell | 10–20 | Glucose detection was demonstrated with a detection limit of 1.4 µM | Liang et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs | ~ 13 | Exhibited peroxidase like activity. Can be applicable as a fluorescent turn-off system for urinary protein detection | Yang et al. ( |
Fig. 7Dual mode magneto-photo-thermal approach using iron oxide nanocubes for tumor ablation.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Espinosa et al. 2016) Copyright (2016) American Chemical Society
Fig. 8Infrared thermal images of phosphate buffered saline (PBS), individual and clustered magnetic Fe3O4 NPs with the concentration of 100 µg/mL injected in A549 tumor sample under NIR laser irradiation for 0–180 s.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Shen et al. 2015) Copyright (2015) Elsevier
Fig. 9Schematic illustration of magnetic targeting, MRI and NIR photothermal therapy by multifunctional PEGylated Fe/Fe3O4 NPs.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Zhou et al. 2014) Copyright (2014) Elsevier
Summary of iron oxide based nanoparticles for hyperthermia and photo thermal therapy
| Nanoparticle/material | Size (nm) | Applications/results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| IONPs (nano-cubes) | 20 | The dual mode (hyperthermia and PTT) of treatment amplified the heating effect by two- to fivefold in comparison with magnetic stimulation alone. Results showed that in both in vitro (SKOV3) (ovarian cancer), PC3 (prostate cancer) and A431 (epidermoid cancer) and in vivo (A431 cancerous cells were injected in nude NMRI mice) complete cell death was observed after dual mode exposure | Espinosa et al. ( |
| ICG/Fe3O4 loaded PLGA NPs | Fe3O4: 10 | Used as an efficient treatment by PTT. In vitro treatment of NPs to MCF-7 breast cancer cells confirmed the damage to cells and in vivo studies demonstrated IONPs can be used as an effective agent for tumor ablation | Niu et al. ( |
| Carboxyl-amine functionalized SPIONs based ferrofluids | ~ 20 | In vitro hyperthermia studies revealed terephthalic acid (TA) and aminoterephthalic acid (ATA) coated SPIONs induced ~ 90% cell death in breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | Kandasamy ( |
| IONPs with HSA | 10 | Used for thermal therapy. MNPs exhibited a saturation magnetization of 63 emu g−1 at 310 K and produced a localized heat in presence of an alternating magnetic field | Mazario ( |
| Clustered magnetic Fe3O4 NPs | Fe3O4: 15 | Used for PTT. The clustered NPs induced high temperature and proved to be more cytotoxic against A549 cells both in vitro and in vivo | Shen et al. ( |
| SPIONs | 6–10 | Hyperthermia based thermotherapy for liver cancer treatment | Kandasamy ( |
| Crystallized IONPs (HCIONPs) | 15 | Showed effective PTT against SUM-159 tumor-bearing mice | Hongwei Chen ( |
| PEGylated Fe@ Fe3O4 (PEGylated iron/iron oxide core/shell NPs) | 13.4 ± 0.8 | These multifunctional NPs can be applied for targeting, MRI imaging and PTT | Zhou et al. ( |
| Fe3O4@CMCT (carboxymethyl chitosan stabilized Fe3O4 NPs) | 177 | Used for PTT. NPs were found accumulated in the mice tumor region and PTT induced the increase in temperature up to ~ 52 °C | Shen et al. ( |
Fig. 10Schematic representation of the structure of FA-CIS-POLYMER-Fe3O4 nanoparticles and cisplatin loading and release.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Yan Zhang 2014) Copyright (2014) Springer Nature
Fig. 11Synthesis and functionalization of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticles for rapid cellular entry and release of the cancer drug Doxorubicin (DOX) in human pancreatic cancer cells. Dextran coated Fe3O4 core with DOX (red fluorescence) and FITC (green fluorescence) surface conjugation chemistry, and the rapid entry (15 min) and intracellular release and accumulation of the cancer drug in the nucleus (white arrow head) of human pancreatic cancer Mia Paca-2 cells..
Reprinted with permission from ref (Arachchige et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) Elsevier
Fig. 12Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) coupled with lentiviral vectors (LVs) as multifunctional and efficient tools to selectively induce transgene expression in solid tumor for therapeutic purposes.
Reprinted with permission from ref (Borroni et al. 2017) Copyright (2017) Elsevier
Summary of iron oxide NPs applications in drug delivery and gene delivery
| Nanoparticle/material | Size (nm) | Applications/results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| IONPs coated with 2-deoxy- | Pore size: 12 | NPs enhanced chemo-radiotherapy efficiency in breast cancer cells through targeting. Results showed the combined NPs treatment with doxorubicin and 2-deoxy- | Pirayesh Islamian et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs | 9 | Used for treating tumors through cryoablation therapy. Results indicated MCF7 cells were killed efficiently by cryoablation | Ye et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs @PEG, folate and cisplatin (Folic acid-Polymer conjugated Fe3O4 NPs with cisplatin) | ~ 10 | Used for ligand-mediated targeting and chemotherapy. Cisplatin-loaded NPs showed concentration dependent cytotoxicity in HeLa cells. Moreover folate conjugation exhibited more cytotoxicity compared to non-conjugated NPs | Yan Zhang ( |
| DOX encapsulated Fe3O4 | ~ 12 | Used as a nano-carrier for anticancer drugs like doxorubicin. NPs can be applied as a chemotherapeutic system for treating lung cancers | Ebrahimi et al. ( |
| Polydopamine coated Fe3O4 with EGFR antibody and DOX | ~ 60 | Used as a multifunctional composites in diagnosis (MRI imaging) and cancer treatment (chemo-photo thermal therapy). Results showed the combination therapy is efficient enough in killing EGFR expressed tumor cells (colon cancer) | Xupeng Mu ( |
| Dextran coated IONPs with FITC and DOX | ~ 8 | Used for drug delivery with multimodal imaging (MRI and FITC Fluorescence) and cancer treatment (drug and hyperthermia) | Arachchige et al. ( |
| MNPs encapsulated in PLGA with DOX | MNPs: 4–6 | Used as a nano-carrier for drugs like doxorubicin. Results showed DOX-MNPs were internalized in to lung cancer cells (Lewis lung carcinoma cells) and induced apoptosis. Moreover in vivo studies revealed more anti-tumor activity in presence of an external magnetic field | Jia et al. ( |
| DOX loaded Fe3O4-reduced graphene oxide | 8–10 | Showed maximum inhibition of HeLa cells with hyperthermia assisted treatment | Gupta ( |
| Daunorubicin loaded Fe3O4 NPs | 100 | Used to treat brain glioma. Results showed this drug loaded NPs can be efficiently delivered into blood brain barrier and can act as promising drug to treat blood tumors | Xuhua Mao ( |
| Homoharringtonine conjugated Fe3O4 NPs | 11.2 | Used for in vitro and in vivo chemotherapy towards hematological malignancy. Results indicated drug conjugated MNPs injected in tumor bearing mice (leukemia) showed a significant decrease in tumor growth compared to drug treatment alone | Chen et al. ( |
| Liposome with paclitaxel and SPIONs | 159–168 | Comprising both MRI and antitumor characteristics. Results showed the tumor growth was supressed in MDA-MB-231 tumor-bearing mice compared to controls | Zheng et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs with adriamycin and daunorubicin | – | Used as a combination therapy to treat lymphoma. Results revealed increased apoptosis in Raji cells and upregulation of p53, down regulation of NF-kB was observed with NPs drug combination treatment | Hongmei Jing ( |
| Cetuximab-IONPs | – | Both in vitro and in vivo studies revealed anti-tumor efficiency against gliomas | Freeman et al. ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs with urosilic metyl esters | 10 | Used as anti-cancer agent for leukaemia. NPs and the drug combination induced apoptosis in drug-resistant human leukemia KA cells | Huilan Yue ( |
| Fe3O4 NPs with alendronate | ~ 20 | Used for treating osteoporosis. Results showed NPs-drug exposure decreased the survival rate of osteoclasts compared to control cells and osteoblasts | Lee et al. ( |
| LV-MNPs | 10–20 | Can be applied as a combined therapeutic system to target gene expression in cancer cells | Borroni et al. ( |
| IONPs with siRNA | IONP core: 9.81 ± 3.73 | Used for treating pancreatic cancers. The nano-conjugate with siRNA resulted in efficient PLK1 silencing and halted the tumour growth with increase in apoptosis | Mahajan et al. ( |
| IONPs loaded chitosan–linoleic acid NPs | 12 | Used as a gene delivering system for targeting hepatocytes and gene silencing | Cheong et al. ( |
| IONPs with PTEN gene | – | Used as gene carriers for PTEN and applied for reversing cisplatin-resistance in lung cancer | Ling-feng Min ( |