A hierarchically porous carbon monolith with a density of 0.059 g cm?3 (97 % porosity) was generated through the carbonization of an emulsion-templated monolith formed from a deep-eutectic polymer based on the polycondensation of 2,5-dihydroxy-1,4-benzoquinone with excess urea. The mechanical integrity and thermal stability of the monolith were successfully enhanced through a chain extension reaction with terephthaloyl chloride (TCL) that occurred during/following the formation of a high internal phase emulsion (HIPE). The bimodal, open-cell macroporous structure of the monolith consisted of many smaller voids with an average diameter of 15 [small micro]m and some larger voids with an average diameter of 49 [small micro]m. Carbonization of the monolith introduced microporosity and meso/macro-porosity, yielding a high specific surface area (812 m2 g?1, largely from micropores), a micropore volume of 0.266 cm3 g?1 (an average diameter of 0.67 nm), and a meso/macro-pore volume of 0.238 cm3 g?1 (an average diameter of 8.1 nm). The elemental composition of the chain-extended polymeric monolith was similar to that predicted from the HIPE components except for a relatively low nitrogen content which may indicate the loss of some urea groups during the chain extension reaction with TCL. The nitrogen-carbon bonds in the carbon monolith from the chain-extended polymer were around 47% pyridinic, 20% pyrrolic, and 33% graphitic. While chain-extension reduced the nitrogen content, the mechanical integrity and thermal stability were enhanced, which was key to generating a highly microporous carbon monolith with a hierarchical porous structure. The carbon monolith exhibited promising results for aqueous solution sorption applications, in both batch and flow modes, owing to its advantageous combination of properties
BackgroundFunctionalized nanoparticles (NPs) are one promising tool for detecting specific molecular targets and combine molecular biology and nanotechnology aiming at modern imaging. We aimed at ligand-directed delivery with a suitable target-biomarker to detect early pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Promising targets are galectins (Gal), due to their strong expression in and on PDAC-cells and occurrence at early stages in cancer precursor lesions, but not in adjacent normal tissues.ResultsMolecular probes (10-29 AA long peptides) derived from human tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) were selected as binding partners to galectins. Affinity constants between the synthesized t-PA peptides and Gal were determined by microscale thermophoresis. The 29 AA-long t-PA-peptide-1 with a lactose-functionalized serine revealed the strongest binding properties to Gal-1 which was 25-fold higher in comparison with the native t-PA protein and showed additional strong binding to Gal-3 and Gal-4, both also over-expressed in PDAC. t-PA-peptide-1 was selected as vector moiety and linked covalently onto the surface of biodegradable iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs). In particular, CAN-doped maghemite NPs (CAN-Mag), promising as contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), were selected as magnetic core and coated with different biocompatible polymers, such as chitosan (CAN-Mag-Chitosan NPs) or polylactic co glycolic acid (PLGA) obtaining polymeric nanoparticles (CAN-Mag@PNPs), already approved for drug delivery applications. The binding efficacy of t-PA-vectorized NPs determined by exposure to different pancreatic cell lines was up to 90%, as assessed by flow cytometry. The in vivo targeting and imaging efficacy of the vectorized NPs were evaluated by applying murine pancreatic tumor models and assessed by 1.5 T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The t-PA-vectorized NPs as well as the protease-activated NPs with outer shell decoration (CAN-Mag@PNPs-PEG-REGAcp-PEG/tPA-pep1Lac) showed clearly detectable drop of subcutaneous and orthotopic tumor staining-intensity indicating a considerable uptake of the injected NPs. Post mortem NP deposition in tumors and organs was confirmed by Fe staining of histopathology tissue sections.ConclusionsThe targeted NPs indicate a fast and enhanced deposition of NPs in the murine tumor models. The CAN-Mag@PNPs-PEG-REGAcp-PEG/tPA-pep1Lac interlocking steps strategy of NPs delivery and deposition in pancreatic tumor is promising.
Macroporous, emulsion-templated, linear poly(urethane urea) elastomers were synthesized from polyols (poly(ε-caprolactone)s or polycarbonates) and a diisocyanate. Growing cells adhered to the walls, spread, and penetrated into the porous structures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.