4.8 Article

pH-Titratable Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide for Improved Nanoparticle Accumulation in Acidic Tumor Microenvironments

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 9592-9601

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn202863x

Keywords

glycol chitosan; Warburg effect; metabolic imaging; EPR; pH; SPIO

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NCI) [R21 CA140695]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-10-1-0351]

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A wide variety of nanoparticle platforms are being developed for the diagnosis and treatment of malignancy. While many of these are passively targeted or rely on receptor ligand interactions, metabolically directed nanoparticles provide a complementary approach. It Is known that both primary and secondary events In tumorigenesis alter the metabolic profile of developing and metastatic cancers. One highly conserved metabolic phenotype is a state of up-regulated glycolysis and reduced use of oxidative phosphorylation, even when oxygen tension is not limiting. This metabolic shift, termed the Warburg effect, creates a hostile tumor microenvironment with Increased levels of lactic acid and low extracellular pH. In order to exploit this phenomenon and improve the delivery of nanoparticle platforms to a wide variety of tumors, a pH-responsive iron oxide nanoparticle was designed. Specifically, glycol chitosan (GC), a water-soluble polymer with pH-titratable charge, was conjugated to the surface of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIO) to generate a T-2*-weighted MR contrast agent that responds to alterations In Its surrounding pH. Compared to control nanoparticles that lack pH sensitivity, these GC-SPIO nanoparticles demonstrated potent pH-dependent cellular association and MR contrast In vitro. In murine tumor models, GC-SPIO also generated robust T-2*-weighted contrast, which correlated with increased delivery of the agent to the tumor site, measured quantitatively by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Importantly, the Increased delivery of GC-SPIO nanoparticles cannot be solely attributed to the commonly observed enhanced permeability and retention effect since these nanoparticles have similar physical properties and blood circulation times as control agents.

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