1 research outputs found
Individually Stabilized, Superparamagnetic Nanoparticles with Controlled Shell and Size Leading to Exceptional Stealth Properties and High Relaxivities
Superparamagnetic
iron oxide nanoparticles (SPION) have received immense interest for
biomedical applications, with the first clinical application as negative
contrast agent in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, the first
generation MRI contrast agents with dextran-enwrapped, polydisperse
iron oxide nanoparticle clusters are limited to imaging of the liver
and spleen; this is related to their poor colloidal stability in biological
media and inability to evade clearance by the reticuloÂendothelial
system. We investigate the qualitatively different performance of
a new generation of individually PEG-grafted core–shell SPION
in terms of relaxivity and cell uptake and compare them to benchmark
iron oxide contrast agents. These PEG-grafted SPION uniquely enable
relaxivity measurements in aqueous suspension without aggregation
even at 9.4 T magnetic fields due to their extraordinary colloidal
stability. This allows for determination of the size-dependent scaling
of relaxivity, which is shown to follow a <i>d</i><sup>2</sup> dependence for identical core–shell structures. The here
introduced core–shell SPION with ∼15 nm core diameter
yield a higher <i>R</i><sub>2</sub> relaxivity than previous
clinically used contrast agents as well as previous generations of
individually stabilized SPION. The colloidal stability extends to
control over evasion of macrophage clearance and stimulated uptake
by SPION functionalized with protein ligands, which is a key requirement
for targeted MRI