4.8 Article

Effects of Mesoporous Silica Coating and Postsynthetic Treatment on the Transverse Relaxivity of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages 1968-1978

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm400711h

Keywords

transverse relaxivity; mesoporous silica; iron oxide; nanoparticles; hydrothermal treatment

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-0645041]
  2. Keck Foundation
  3. NIH Biotechnology Research Center (BTRC) [P41 RR008079, P41 EB015894]
  4. NSF through the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network via the MRSEC program
  5. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  6. Taiwan Merit Scholarship [NSC-095-SAF-I-70 564-052-TMS]

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Mesoporous silica nanoparticles have the capacity to load and deliver therapeutic cargo and incorporate imaging modalities, making them prominent candidates for theranostic devices. One of the most widespread imaging agents utilized in this and other theranostic platforms is nanoscale superparamagnetic iron oxide. Although several core-shell magnetic rnesoporous silica nanoparticles presented in the literature have provided high T-2 contrast in vitro and in vivo, there is ambiguity surrounding which parameters lead to enhanced contrast Additionally, there is a need to understand the behavior of these imaging agents over time in biologically relevant environments. Herein, we present a systematic analysis of how the transverse relaxivity (r(2)) of magnetic mesoporous silica nanoparticles is influenced by nanoparticle diameter, iron oxide nanoparticle core synthesis, and use of a hydrothermal treatment This work demonstrates that samples which did not undergo a hydrothermal treatment experienced a drop in r(2) (75% of original r(2) within 8 days of water storage), while samples with hydrothermal treatment maintained roughly the same r(2) for over 30 days in water. Our results suggest that iron oxide oxidation is the cause of r(2) loss, and this oxidation can be prevented during both synthesis and storage by use of deoxygenated conditions during nanoparticle synthesis. Hydrothermal treatment also provides colloidal stability, even in acidic and highly salted solutions, and a resistance against acid degradation of the iron oxide nanoparticle core. Results of this study show the promise of multifunctional mesoporous silica nanoparticles but will also likely inspire further investigation into multiple types of theranostic devices, taking into consideration their behavior over time and in relevant biological environments.

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