4.6 Article

Tobacco mosaic virus rods and spheres as supramolecular high-relaxivity MRI contrast agents

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 1, Issue 10, Pages 1482-1490

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3tb00461a

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Funding

  1. NIH/NIBIB grant [P30 EB011317]

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To compensate for the low sensitivity of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nanoparticles have been developed to deliver high payloads of contrast agents to sites of disease. Here, we report the development of supramolecular MRI contrast agents using the plant viral nanoparticle tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Rod-shaped TMV nanoparticles measuring 300 x 18 nm were loaded with up to 3500 or 2000 chelated paramagnetic gadolinium(III) ions selectively at the interior (iGd-TMV) or exterior (eGd-TMV) surface, respectively. Spatial control is achieved through targeting either tyrosine or carboxylic acid side chains on the solvent exposed exterior or interior TMV surface. The ionic T-1 relaxivity per Gd ion (at 60 MHz) increases from 4.9 mM(-1) s(-1) for free Gd(DOTA) to 18.4 mM(-1) s(-1) for eGd-TMV and 10.7 mM(-1) s(-1) for iGd-TMV. This equates to T-1 values of similar to 30 000 mM(-1) s(-1) and similar to 35 000 mM(-1) s(-1) per eGd-TMV and iGd-TMV nanoparticle. Further, we show that interior-labeled TMV rods can undergo thermal transition to form 170 nm-sized spherical nanoparticles containing similar to 25 000 Gd chelates and a per particle relaxivity of almost 400 000 mM(-1) s(-1) (15.2 mM(-1) s(-1) per Gd). This work lays the foundation for the use of TMV as a contrast agent for MRI.

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