4.8 Article

Ultra-small iron-gallic acid coordination polymer nanoparticles for chelator-free labeling of 64Cu and multimodal imaging-guided photothermal therapy

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 9, Issue 34, Pages 12609-12617

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7nr03086j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51572180, 51525203, 51302180]
  2. National Research Programs from the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of China [2016YFA0201200]
  3. Post-doctoral science foundation of China [2013 M531400, 2014 T70542]
  4. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  5. National Institutes of Health [NIBIB/NCI 1R01CA169365, P30CA014520]
  6. American Cancer Society [125246-RSG-13-099-01-CCE]

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Cancer nanotechnology has become the hot topic nowadays. While various kinds of nanomaterials have been widely explored for innovative cancer imaging and therapy applications, safe multifunctional nanoagents without long-term retention and toxicity are still demanded. Herein, iron-gallic acid coordination nanoparticles (Fe-GA CPNs) with ultra-small sizes are successfully synthesized by a simple method for multimodal imaging-guided cancer therapy. After surface modification with polyethylene glycol (PEG), the synthesized Fe-GA-PEG CPNs show high stability in various physiological solutions. Taking advantage of high near-infrared (NIR) absorbance as well as the T1-MR contrasting ability of Fe-GA-PEG CPNs, in vivo photoacoustic tomography (PAT) and magnetic resonance (MR) bimodal imaging are carried out, revealing the efficient passive tumor targeting of these ultra-small CPNs after intravenous (i.v.) injection. Interestingly, such Fe-GA-PEG CPNs could be labeled with the Cu-64 isotope via a chelator-free method for in vivo PET imaging, which also illustrates the high tumor uptake of Fe-GA CPNs. We further utilize Fe-GA-PEG CPNs for in vivo photothermal therapy and achieve highly effective tumor destruction after i.v. injection of Fe-GA-PEG CPNs and the following NIR laser irradiation of the tumors, without observing any apparent toxicity of such CPNs to the treated animals. Our work highlights the promise of ultra-small iron coordination nanoparticles for imaging-guided cancer therapy.

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