1 research outputs found
Controlled In Situ Self-Assembly of Biotinylated Trans-Cyclooctene Nanoparticles for Orthogonal Dual-Pretargeted Near-Infrared Fluorescence and Magnetic Resonance Imaging
A pretargeted strategy that decouples targeting vectors
from radionuclides
has shown promise for nuclear imaging and/or therapy in vivo. However,
the current pretargeted approach relies on the use of antibodies or
nanoparticles as the targeting vectors, which may be compromised by
poor tissue penetration and limited accumulation of targeting vectors
in the tumor tissues. Herein, we present an orthogonal dual-pretargeted
approach by combining stimuli-triggered in situ self-assembly strategy
with fast inverse electron demand Diels–Alder (IEDDA) reaction
and strong biotin-streptavidin (SA) interaction for near-infrared
fluorescence (NIR FL) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of tumors.
This approach uses a small-molecule probe (P-Cy-TCO&Bio) containing
both biotin and trans-cyclooctene (TCO) as a tumor-targeting vector.
P-Cy-TCO&Bio can efficiently penetrate subcutaneous HeLa tumors
through biotin-assisted targeted delivery and undergo in situ self-assembly
to form biotinylated TCO-bearing nanoparticles (Cy-TCO&Bio NPs)
on tumor cell membranes. Cy-TCO&Bio NPs exhibited an “off-on”
NIR FL and retained in the tumors, offering a high density of TCO
and biotin groups for the concurrent capture of Gd-chelate-labeled
tetrazine (Tz-Gd) and IR780-labeled SA (SA-780) via the orthogonal
IEDDA reaction and SA-biotin interaction. Moreover, Cy-TCO&Bio
NPs offered multiple-valent binding modes toward SA, which additionally
regulated the cross-linking of Cy-Gd&Bio NPs into microparticles
(Cy-Gd&Bio/SA MPs). This process could significantly (1) increase r1 relaxivity and (2) enhance the accumulation
of Tz-Gd and SA-780 in the tumors, resulting in strong NIR FL, bright
MR contrast, and an extended time window for the clear and precise
imaging of HeLa tumors