4.7 Article

Early diagnosis of breast cancer lung metastasis by nanoprobe-based luminescence imaging of the pre-metastatic niche

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-022-01346-4

Keywords

Lung metastasis; Breast cancer; Luminescence imaging; Targeting nanoprobe; Neutrophils

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81801841, 81971727]
  2. Program for Distinguished Young Scholars of TMMU

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The luminescent nanoparticles (LAD NPs) based on neutrophil-targeting imaging strategy can serve as a promising modality for early diagnosis of lung metastasis of breast cancers. The targeting nanoprobe shows enhanced luminescence imaging capability and outperforms PET/CT imaging modalities in detecting pulmonary metastasis.
Background: Early detection of breast cancer lung metastasis remains highly challenging, due to few metastatic cancer cells at an early stage. Herein we propose a new strategy for early diagnosis of lung metastasis of breast cancer by luminescence imaging of pulmonary neutrophil infiltration via self-illuminating nanoprobes. Methods: Luminescent nanoparticles (LAD NPs) were engineered using a biocompatible, neutrophil-responsive self-illuminating cyclodextrin material and an aggregation-induced emission agent. The chemiluminescence resonance energy transfer (CRET) effect and luminescence properties of LAD NPs were fully characterized. Using mouse peritoneal neutrophils, in vitro luminescence properties of LAD NPs were thoroughly examined. In vivo luminescence imaging and correlation analyses were performed in mice inoculated with 4T1 cancer cells. Moreover, an active targeting nanoprobe was developed by surface decoration of LAD NPs with a neutrophil-targeting peptide, which was also systemically evaluated by in vitro and in vivo studies. Results: LAD NPs can generate long-wavelength and persistent luminescence due to the CRET effect. In a mouse model of 4T1 breast cancer lung metastasis, we found desirable correlation between neutrophils and tumor cells in the lungs, demonstrating the effectiveness of early imaging of the pre-metastatic niche by the newly developed LAD NPs. The active targeting nanoprobe showed further enhanced luminescence imaging capability for early detection of pulmonary metastasis. Notably, the targeting nanoprobe-based luminescence imaging strategy remarkably outperformed PET/CT imaging modalities in the examined mouse model. Also, preliminary tests demonstrated good safety of LAD NPs. Conclusions: The neutrophil-targeting imaging strategy based on newly developed luminescence nanoparticles can serve as a promising modality for early diagnosis of lung metastasis of breast cancers.

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