4.5 Article

Formulation of long-wavelength indocyanine green nanocarriers

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL OPTICS
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.22.9.096007

Keywords

long-wavelength imaging; biomedical imaging; indocyanine green; nanocarriers; nanoparticles; stability

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1RO1CA155061-1]
  2. Stuart M. Essig '83 Fund for Innovation in Engineering and Neuroscience
  3. Erin S. Enright '82 Fund for Innovation in Engineering and Neuroscience

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Indocyanine green (ICG), a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved fluorophore with excitation and emission wavelengths inside the optical imaging window, has been incorporated into nanocarriers (NCs) to achieve enhanced circulation time, targeting, and real-time tracking in vivo. While previous studies transferred ICG exogenously into NCs, here, a one-step rapid precipitation process [flash nanoprecipitation (FNP)] creates ICG-loaded NCs with tunable, narrow size distributions from 30 to 180 nm. A hydrophobic ion pair of ICG-tetraoctylammonium or tetradodecylammonium chloride is formed either in situ during FNP or preformed then introduced into the FNP feed stream. The NCs are formulated with cores comprising either vitamin E (VE) or polystyrene (PS). ICG core loadings of 30 wt. % for VE and 10 wt. % for PS are achieved. However, due to a combination of molecular aggregation and Frster quenching, maximum fluorescence (FL) occurs at 10 wt. % core loading. The FL-per-particle scales with core diameter to the third power, showing that FNP enables uniform volume encapsulation. By varying the ICG counter-ion ratio, encapsulation efficiencies above 80% are achieved even in the absence of ion pairing, which rises to 100% with 1:1 ion pairing. Finally, while ICG ion pairs are shown to be stable in buffer, they partition out of NC cores in under 30 min in the presence of physiological albumin concentrations. (C) 2017 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)

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