| Literature DB >> 34211476 |
Abstract
Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) bear big hopes in nanomedicine due to their (potential) applications in tumor therapy, drug delivery or bioimaging. However, as foreign entities, such particles may be recognized by the immune system and, thus, lead to inflammation, hypersensitivity or anaphylactic shock. In addition, an overload with iron is known to cause oxidative stress. In this short review, we summarize the biological effects of such particles with a major focus on IONP-formulations used for bioimaging purposes and their effects on the human immune system. We conclude that especially the characteristics of the particles (size, shape, surface charge, coating, etc.) as well as the presence of bystander substances, such as bacterial endotoxin are important factors determining the resulting biological and immunological effects of IONPs. Further studies are needed in order to establish clear structure-activity relationships.Entities:
Keywords: MRI contrast agent; ROS; SPIONs; endotoxin; inflammation; oxidative stress
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211476 PMCID: PMC8239972 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.688927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Selected IONP-based contrast agents for MRI.
| Formulation | Trade name(s) | Coating | Application(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ferumoxide | Feridex®, Endorem® | Dextran | Liver imaging |
| Ferucarbotran | Ciavist™, Resovist® | Carboxydextran | Liver imaging |
| Ferumoxtran-10 | Sinerem®, Combidex® | Dextran | Lymph node imaging |
| Ferumoxytol | Feraheme®, Rienso® | Polyglucose sorbitol carboxymethyl ether | CNS imaging, blood pool imaging, lymph node imaging, Iron deficiency treatment |
| Citrate-coated very small iron oxide NP | VSOP C184 | Citrate | MR angiography, Blood pool imaging |
| Feruglose | Clariscan® | PEGylated starch | MR angiography, Blood pool imaging |
| Ferumoxsil | Lumirem®, GastroMARK® | Siloxane | Oral GI imaging |
Figure 1Uptake and intracellular fate of IONPs. Depending on IONP-size and coating and on the investigated cell type, different endocytic mechanisms contribute to the uptake of intact IONPs into the cells where the particles typically enter the endo-lysosomal system. Inside the cell, iron can be liberated from the NPs and contribute to several reactions including Fenton- and Haber-Weiss reactions leading to the formation of hydroxyl radicals which can induce cell damage.
IONP-derived immune effects and up-/downregulated cytokines of the studies reviewed in this articles.
| Cell type | Immune effects / cytokines up- or downregulated | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Monocytes | Autophagy / IL-1β (+), IL-6 (+), TNFα (+) | ( |
| Suppression of LPS-induced NFκB activation | ( | |
| IL-1β (+) | ( | |
| IL-6 (–) | ( | |
| Macrophages | M1 activation, IL-12 (+) | ( |
| APCs | IL-1β (+) | ( |
| DCs | Upregulation of several proinflammatory cytokines | ( |
| Lymphocytes | expression of CD80, CD86 and MHC class II | ( |
| autophagy / antigen cross-presentation | ( | |
| oxidative stress, glutathione depletion | ( | |
| Attenuation of Th17 cell responses | ( | |
| IL-6 (–), IL-17 (–), ROR-γt (–) | ( | |
| Suppression of T-lymphocytes | ( | |
| Th1 immune activation | ( |