4.4 Article

High-relaxivity supramolecular aggregates containing peptides and Gd complexes as contrast agents in MRI

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 267-276

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00775-006-0186-6

Keywords

supramolecular aggregates; gadolinium complexes; magnetic resonance imaging; C-terminal octapeptide of cholecystokinin; dynamic light scattering

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Mixed supramolecular aggregates, obtained by assembling together two amphiphilic monomers (C18H37)(2)NCO(CH2)(2)CO(AdOO)(5)-G-CCK8 (AdOO is 8-amino-3,6-dioxaoctanoic acid, CCK8 is C-terminal octapeptide of cholecystokinin) and (C18H37)(2)NCO(CH2)(2)COLys(DTPAGlu)CONH2 (DTPAGlu is N,N-bis[2-[bis(carboxyethyl)amino]ethyl]-L-glutamic acid), are characterized for their structural parameters by dynamic light scattering and for their relaxometric properties, in the absence and in the presence of 0.9 wt% NaCl. Two different aggregates (micelles and bilayer structures) are present in the absence of NaCl, while only bilayer structures are observed at physiological ionic strength. The presence of NaCl increases the ionic strength, promoting a decrease in the repulsions between the polar heads and among the aggregates in solution, thus supporting the formation of large-curvature aggregates such as bilayer structures like vesicles. In these conditions the closed, vesicular shape and the large size (hydrodynamic radius of about 300 angstrom) of the aggregates allow a high number of paramagnetic gadolinium complexes and bioactive peptides to be accommodated on the inner and external surfaces . The presence of the salt causes a variation in the structural arrangement of the molecules and a partial rigidification of the assembled Gd(III) complexes on the surface vesicles, reducing their internal motions and giving an approximately 15% higher relaxivity value (r (1p) = 21.0 and 18.6 Mm(-1) s(-1) in the presence and in the absence of NaCl, respectively). The vesicles obtained, for the high relaxivity of each gadolidium complex and for the presence of a surface-exposed bioactive peptide, are very promising candidates as target-selective MRI contrast agents.

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