Aim: Targeted biocompatible nanoplatforms presenting multiple therapeutic functions have great potential for the treatment of cancer. Materials & methods: Multifunctional nanocomposites formed by polymeric nanoparticles (PNPs) containing two cytotoxic agents -the drug alisertib and silver nanoparticles -were synthesized. These PNPs have been conjugated with a chlorotoxin, an active targeting 36-amino acid-long peptide that specifically binds to MMP-2, a receptor overexpressed by brain cancer cells.
Results:The individual and synergistic activity of these two cytotoxic agents against glioblastoma multiforme was tested both in vitro and in vivo. The induced cytotoxicity in a human glioblastoma-astrocytoma epithelial-like cell line (U87MG) was studied in vitro through a trypan blue exclusion test after 48 and 72 h of exposure. Subsequently, the PNPs' biodistribution in healthy animals and their effect on tumor reduction in tumor-bearing mice were studied using PNPs radiolabeled with 99m Tc. Conclusion: Tumor reduction was achieved in vivo when using silver/alisertib@PNPs-chlorotoxin.
Dual-modality contrast agents, such as radiolabeled nanoparticles, are promising candidates for a number of diagnostic applications, since they combine the advantages of two different imaging modalities, namely SPECT or PET imaging with MR imaging. The benefit of such a combination is to more accurately interpret disease and abnormalities in vivo, by exploiting the advantages of each imaging technique, i.e. high sensitivity for SPECT/PET, high resolution anatomical information for MRI. In this review article, we provide an overview of recent findings in the synthesis, evaluation and application of radiolabeled iron oxide nanoparticles as dual-modality SPECT/MRI and PET/MRI imaging probes.
The synthesis and characterization of "2 + 1" complexes of the [M(CO)(3)](+) (M = Re, (99m)Tc) core with the β-diketones acetylacetone (complexes 2, 8) and curcumin (complexes 5, 10 and 6, 11) as bidentate OO ligands, and imidazole or isocyanocyclohexane as monodentate ligands is reported. The complexes were synthesized by reacting the [NEt(4)](2)[Re(CO)(3)Br(3)] precursor with the β-diketone to generate the intermediate aqua complex fac-Re(CO)(3)(OO)(H(2)O) that was isolated and characterized, followed by replacement of the labile water by the monodentate ligand. All complexes were characterized by mass spectrometry, NMR and IR spectroscopies, and elemental analysis. In the case of complex 2, bearing imidazole as the monodentate ligand, X-ray analysis was possible. The chemistry was successfully transferred at (99m)Tc tracer level. The curcumin complexes 5 and 6, as well as their intermediate aqua complex 4, that bear potential for radiopharmaceutical applications due to the wide spectrum of pharmacological activity of curcumin, were successfully tested for selective staining of β-amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's disease. The fact that the complexes maintain the affinity of the mother compound curcumin for β-amyloid plaques prompts for further exploration of their chemistry and biological properties as radioimaging probes.
Nanomedicine applications have recently gathered great attention in terms of their revolutionary properties and multivalency. Nanoparticles (NPs) have proven useful owing to their size, surface and kinetics advantages, as well as their ability to be functionalized with targeting, imaging and therapeutic moieties. Nuclear medicine is actively involved in nano-research innovative breakthrough efforts in multiple applications, through the radiolabeling of NP structures. There are several ways that NP-radiolabeling can be approached depending on the radionuclide that is used and the NP type. The radiolabeling of NPs with the most widely and easily available radiometal, which is (99m) Tc, is the focus of this review.
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