4.3 Article

Synthesis of 68Ga-Labeled Biopolymer-based Nanoparticle Imaging Agents for Positron-emission Tomography

Journal

ANTICANCER RESEARCH
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 2415-2427

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/anticanres.13359

Keywords

Poly-gamma-glutamic acid; chitosan; self-assembling nanoparticles; Ga-68-NODAGA; xenograft model

Categories

Funding

  1. JEREMIE-Joint European Resources for Micro to Medium Enterprises

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aim: The purpose of this study was to develop a folate receptor-targeted Ga-68-labeled agent for the detection of cancer cells in mouse models of ovarian cancer by dual positron-emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Moreover, we aimed to develop a controlled biopolymer-based chemistry that enables linking metal-binding (here Ga-68) chelators. Materials and Methods: The nanoparticle (NP) agent was created by self-assembling of folic acid-modified polyglutamic acid and chelator-modified chitosan followed by radiolabeling with Ga-68 (III) ions (Ga-68-NODAGA-FA). The structure of modified biopolymers was characterized by spectroscopy. Particle size and mobility were determined. Results: Significant selective binding of NPs was established in vitro using folate receptor-positive KB and - negative MDA-MB-231 cell lines. In vivo tumor uptake of folate-targeted Ga-68(3+)-radiolabeled NPs was tested using subcutaneous tumor-bearing CB17 SCID mice models. PET/MR dual modalities showed high tumor uptake with 6.5 tumor-to-muscle ratio and NP localization. Conclusion: In vivo results supporting the preliminary in vitro tests demonstrated considerably higher Ga-68-NODAGA-FA nanoparticle accumulation in KB tumors than in MDA-MB-231 tumors, thereby confirming the folate receptor-mediated uptake of this novel potential PET imaging agent.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available