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Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles

Iron oxide nanoparticles are a useful diagnostic contrast agent and have great potential for therapeutic applications. Multiple emerging diagnostic and therapeutic applications and the numerous versatile parameters of the nanoparticle platform require a robust biological model for characterization a...

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Autores principales: Ho, Don N., Kohler, Nathan, Sigdel, Aruna, Kalluri, Raghu, Morgan, Jeffrey R., Xu, Chenjie, Sun, Shouheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3263517/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22272220
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.3568
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author Ho, Don N.
Kohler, Nathan
Sigdel, Aruna
Kalluri, Raghu
Morgan, Jeffrey R.
Xu, Chenjie
Sun, Shouheng
author_facet Ho, Don N.
Kohler, Nathan
Sigdel, Aruna
Kalluri, Raghu
Morgan, Jeffrey R.
Xu, Chenjie
Sun, Shouheng
author_sort Ho, Don N.
collection PubMed
description Iron oxide nanoparticles are a useful diagnostic contrast agent and have great potential for therapeutic applications. Multiple emerging diagnostic and therapeutic applications and the numerous versatile parameters of the nanoparticle platform require a robust biological model for characterization and assessment. Here we investigate the use of iron oxide nanoparticles that target tumor vasculature, via the tumstatin peptide, in a novel three-dimensional tissue culture model. The developed tissue culture model more closely mimics the in vivo environment with a leaky endothelium coating around a glioma tumor mass. Tumstatin-iron oxide nanoparticles showed penetration and selective targeting to endothelial cell coating on the tumor in the three-dimensional model, and had approximately 2 times greater uptake in vitro and 2.7 times tumor neo-vascularization inhibition. Tumstatin provides targeting and therapeutic capabilities to the iron oxide nanoparticle diagnostic contrast agent platform. And the novel endothelial cell-coated tumor model provides an in vitro microtissue environment to evaluate nanoparticles without moving into costly and time-consuming animal models.
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spelling pubmed-32635172012-01-23 Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Ho, Don N. Kohler, Nathan Sigdel, Aruna Kalluri, Raghu Morgan, Jeffrey R. Xu, Chenjie Sun, Shouheng Theranostics Research Paper Iron oxide nanoparticles are a useful diagnostic contrast agent and have great potential for therapeutic applications. Multiple emerging diagnostic and therapeutic applications and the numerous versatile parameters of the nanoparticle platform require a robust biological model for characterization and assessment. Here we investigate the use of iron oxide nanoparticles that target tumor vasculature, via the tumstatin peptide, in a novel three-dimensional tissue culture model. The developed tissue culture model more closely mimics the in vivo environment with a leaky endothelium coating around a glioma tumor mass. Tumstatin-iron oxide nanoparticles showed penetration and selective targeting to endothelial cell coating on the tumor in the three-dimensional model, and had approximately 2 times greater uptake in vitro and 2.7 times tumor neo-vascularization inhibition. Tumstatin provides targeting and therapeutic capabilities to the iron oxide nanoparticle diagnostic contrast agent platform. And the novel endothelial cell-coated tumor model provides an in vitro microtissue environment to evaluate nanoparticles without moving into costly and time-consuming animal models. Ivyspring International Publisher 2012-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3263517/ /pubmed/22272220 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.3568 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Ho, Don N.
Kohler, Nathan
Sigdel, Aruna
Kalluri, Raghu
Morgan, Jeffrey R.
Xu, Chenjie
Sun, Shouheng
Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title_full Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title_fullStr Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title_short Penetration of Endothelial Cell Coated Multicellular Tumor Spheroids by Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
title_sort penetration of endothelial cell coated multicellular tumor spheroids by iron oxide nanoparticles
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3263517/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22272220
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.3568
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