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Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level

Advances in surfactant-assisted chemical approaches have led the way for the exploitation of nanoscale inorganic particles in medical diagnosis and treatment. In this field, magnetically-driven multimodal nanotools that perform both detection and therapy, well-designed in size, shape and composition...

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Autores principales: Kostopoulou, Athanasia, Brintakis, Konstantinos, Fragogeorgi, Eirini, Anthousi, Amalia, Manna, Liberato, Begin-Colin, Sylvie, Billotey, Claire, Ranella, Anthi, Loudos, George, Athanassakis, Irene, Lappas, Alexandros
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5977329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29747449
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano8050315
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author Kostopoulou, Athanasia
Brintakis, Konstantinos
Fragogeorgi, Eirini
Anthousi, Amalia
Manna, Liberato
Begin-Colin, Sylvie
Billotey, Claire
Ranella, Anthi
Loudos, George
Athanassakis, Irene
Lappas, Alexandros
author_facet Kostopoulou, Athanasia
Brintakis, Konstantinos
Fragogeorgi, Eirini
Anthousi, Amalia
Manna, Liberato
Begin-Colin, Sylvie
Billotey, Claire
Ranella, Anthi
Loudos, George
Athanassakis, Irene
Lappas, Alexandros
author_sort Kostopoulou, Athanasia
collection PubMed
description Advances in surfactant-assisted chemical approaches have led the way for the exploitation of nanoscale inorganic particles in medical diagnosis and treatment. In this field, magnetically-driven multimodal nanotools that perform both detection and therapy, well-designed in size, shape and composition, are highly advantageous. Such a theranostic material—which entails the controlled assembly of smaller (maghemite) nanocrystals in a secondary motif that is highly dispersible in aqueous media—is discussed here. These surface functionalized, pomegranate-like ferrimagnetic nanoclusters (40–85 nm) are made of nanocrystal subunits that show a remarkable magnetic resonance imaging contrast efficiency, which is better than that of the superparamagnetic contrast agent Endorem(©). Going beyond this attribute and with their demonstrated low cytotoxicity in hand, we examine the critical interaction of such nanoprobes with cells at different physiological environments. The time-dependent in vivo scintigraphic imaging of mice experimental models, combined with a biodistribution study, revealed the accumulation of nanoclusters in the spleen and liver. Moreover, the in vitro proliferation of spleen cells and cytokine production witnessed a size-selective regulation of immune system cells, inferring that smaller clusters induce mainly inflammatory activities, while larger ones induce anti-inflammatory actions. The preliminary findings corroborate that the modular chemistry of magnetic iron oxide nanoclusters stimulates unexplored pathways that could be driven to alter their function in favor of healthcare.
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spelling pubmed-59773292018-06-05 Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level Kostopoulou, Athanasia Brintakis, Konstantinos Fragogeorgi, Eirini Anthousi, Amalia Manna, Liberato Begin-Colin, Sylvie Billotey, Claire Ranella, Anthi Loudos, George Athanassakis, Irene Lappas, Alexandros Nanomaterials (Basel) Article Advances in surfactant-assisted chemical approaches have led the way for the exploitation of nanoscale inorganic particles in medical diagnosis and treatment. In this field, magnetically-driven multimodal nanotools that perform both detection and therapy, well-designed in size, shape and composition, are highly advantageous. Such a theranostic material—which entails the controlled assembly of smaller (maghemite) nanocrystals in a secondary motif that is highly dispersible in aqueous media—is discussed here. These surface functionalized, pomegranate-like ferrimagnetic nanoclusters (40–85 nm) are made of nanocrystal subunits that show a remarkable magnetic resonance imaging contrast efficiency, which is better than that of the superparamagnetic contrast agent Endorem(©). Going beyond this attribute and with their demonstrated low cytotoxicity in hand, we examine the critical interaction of such nanoprobes with cells at different physiological environments. The time-dependent in vivo scintigraphic imaging of mice experimental models, combined with a biodistribution study, revealed the accumulation of nanoclusters in the spleen and liver. Moreover, the in vitro proliferation of spleen cells and cytokine production witnessed a size-selective regulation of immune system cells, inferring that smaller clusters induce mainly inflammatory activities, while larger ones induce anti-inflammatory actions. The preliminary findings corroborate that the modular chemistry of magnetic iron oxide nanoclusters stimulates unexplored pathways that could be driven to alter their function in favor of healthcare. MDPI 2018-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5977329/ /pubmed/29747449 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano8050315 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kostopoulou, Athanasia
Brintakis, Konstantinos
Fragogeorgi, Eirini
Anthousi, Amalia
Manna, Liberato
Begin-Colin, Sylvie
Billotey, Claire
Ranella, Anthi
Loudos, George
Athanassakis, Irene
Lappas, Alexandros
Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title_full Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title_fullStr Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title_full_unstemmed Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title_short Iron Oxide Colloidal Nanoclusters as Theranostic Vehicles and Their Interactions at the Cellular Level
title_sort iron oxide colloidal nanoclusters as theranostic vehicles and their interactions at the cellular level
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5977329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29747449
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano8050315
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