SPIO accumulates in aortic plaques of atherosclerotic rabbits, producing a characteristic MRI finding. As SPIO accumulates in plaques with increased endothelial permeability and a high macrophage content, two established features of plaque inflammation, it may have a potential for noninvasive assessment of inflammatory atherosclerotic plaques.
Human transferrin was covalently coupled to ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) particles, and the transferrin-USPIO obtained was investigated in vivo in experimental SMT/2A tumor-bearing rats (rat mammary carcinoma). Physicochemical characterization showed an overall size of 36 nm (DLS) with a core size of 5 nm (TEM). Relaxivities were R1 = 23.6 and R2 = 52.1 liter/mmol.s (0.47 T). Bound transferrin was 280 micrograms/mg of iron. Pharmacokinetic investigations revealed a half-life of 17 min in normal rats. The MR evaluation of tumor signal intensity over time showed a 40% (range 25-55%) signal reduction 150 min after injection with the reduction persisting for at least 8 h. Control experiments using the parent USPIO compound or USPIO labeled with a nonspecific human serum albumin (HSA-USPIO) showed a change of only 10% (range 5-15%) in tumor signal intensity over time. The results demonstrate that a combination of the USPIO relaxivity properties with the specificity of transferrin-mediated endocytosis allows in vivo detection of tumors by MR imaging.
Citrate-coated USPIO particles VSOP-C125 appear to have more favorable properties for magnetic labeling of macrophages than the carboxydextran-coated USPIO preparation DDM 43/34/103.
Centrifugation was regarded as the most suitable separation method due to its speed and ease of use. In contrast to gel filtration, any washing media can be used. The magnetic separation process is restricted to particles with high inducible magnetic saturation, in particular, to iron oxides with overall sizes > 50 nm.
The major aim of this study was to prove or disprove the theories concerning the correlation between physicochemical properties of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) particles and their accumulation in the lymph nodes. New SPIO particles were produced using starch as stabilising polymer shell. The synthesis was done in a two-step procedure using conventional wet-chemical precipitation technique and subsequent coating of the iron oxide cores. The particles were physicochemically characterised and their lymphotrophy studied in rats using well described lymphotropic dextran-coated SPIO particles as reference. Despite the short blood half-lives of approximately 13 min and the relatively large sizes (approximately 60-90 nm), the starch SPIO particles proved at least as efficient in lymph node accumulation as the small 25 nm dextran SPIO particles having a half-life of 90 min. The currently accepted theories concerning the connection between particle properties and their uptake into lymph nodes are not generally valid, or have at least to be limited for dextran-coated SPIO particles. Lymph node targeting could be achieved despite the present theories consider small size (<30 nm) and long circulation times in the blood as prerequisites. Histological examination showed, that SPIO particles could only be found in lymph node areas where macrophages could be marked which enclosed the particles. Localisation in marginal areas of the lymph nodes indicates endothelial transcytosis as the major accumulation pathway.
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.