Iron oxide nanoparticles are used in vivo as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging. Their widely used polymer coatings are directly involved in their biocompatibility and avoid magnetic aggregation. As these polymer brushes also limit their tissular diffusion due to important hydrodynamic sizes, this work looks to obtain particles coated with thin layers of organic biocompatible molecules. Coating molecules were chosen depending on their fixation site on iron cores; carboxylates, sulfonates, phosphates, and phosphonates, and, among them, analogs of the phosphorylcholine. Two coating procedures (dialysis and exchange resins purification) were evaluated for hydrodynamic size, total iron concentration, electrophoretic mobility, and colloidal stability. Furthermore, a complementary test on stainless steel plates evaluated the contamination by competition of phosphonates as a rough estimation of the biocompatibility of the particles. Coating with bisphosphonates, the more interesting fixation moiety, leads to small (less than 15 nm) and stable objects in a wide range of pH including the neutrality. From stability data, the coating density was evaluated at around 1.6 molecules per nm(2). Including a quaternary ammonium salt to the coating molecule lowers their electrophoretic mobility. Moreover, this type of coating protects steel plates against contamination without significant desorption. All these properties allow further developments of these nanoparticles for biomedical applications. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jcis.2001.7500 | DOI Listing |
Curr Pharm Des
January 2025
Department of Pharmacy, Delhi Pharmaceutical Sciences and Research University, New Delhi, India.
Background: The metal oxide nanoparticles possess unique properties such as biological compatibility, superior reactivity, and capacity to develop reactive oxygen species, due to this they have drawn significant interest in cancer treatment. The various MONPs such as cerium oxide, Copper oxide, Iron oxide, Titanium dioxide, and Zinc oxide have been investigated for several types of cancers including brain, breast, cervical, colon, leukemia, liver, lung, melanoma, ovarian, and prostate cancers. However, traditional physiochemical synthetic methods for MONPs commonly include toxic materials, a major concern that raises questions regarding their biocompatibility and safety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Pharm Biotechnol
January 2025
Department of Clinical Oncology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Introduction: Iron oxide nanozyme was synthesized from the fruit peel extract of pomegranate, which served as a reducing agent during the green synthesis. The scavenging of reactive oxygen species is often accompanied by immunomodulation following antiproliferative effects due to the crosstalk between the proteins involved in the inter-related signaling pathways.
Method: In the current study, the green synthesized nanozyme was studied for its ability to induce apoptosis in breast cancer cell lines.
J Hazard Mater
January 2025
MOE Key Laboratory of Surficial Geochemistry, School of Earth Sciences and Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210023, China. Electronic address:
Agricultural soils in karst regions present a remarkable paradox where high geochemical background levels of heavy metals correspond with unexpectedly low crop uptake, challenging traditional risk assessment frameworks and limiting agricultural development. To decode this paradox, we investigated the geochemical speciation of cadmium (Cd), nickel (Ni), and zinc (Zn) in soil-rice systems in southwestern China, which collectively constitute the world's largest continuous karst region and represent diverse soil weathering stages. We employed three chemical extraction methods that revealed reactive pools ranking as Cd (58.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
January 2025
Department of Urban, Energy, and Environmental Engineering, Chungbuk National University, Chungdae-ro 1, Seowon-Gu, Cheongju, Chungbuk, 28644, Republic of Korea.
Developing efficient, economical, and stable catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction is pivotal for producing large-scale green hydrogen in the future. Herein, a vanadium-doped nickel-iron oxide supported on nickel foam (V-NiFeO/NF) is introduced, and synthesized via a facile hydrothermal method as a highly efficient electrocatalyst for water electrolysis. X-ray photoelectron and absorption spectroscopies reveal a synergistic interaction between the vanadium dopant and nickel/iron in the host material, which tunes the electronic structure of NiFeO to increase the number of electrochemically active sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
January 2025
University of Regensburg, Inorganic Chemistry, Universitätsstrasse 31, D-93040, Regensburg, GERMANY.
The systematic nucleophilic functionalization of the cationic pentaphosphole ligand complex [Cp*Fe(η4-P5Me)][OTf] (A) with group 16/17 nucleophiles is reported. This method represents a highly reliable and versatile strategy for the design of novel transition-metal complexes featuring twofold substituted end-deck cyclo-P5 ligands, bearing unprecedented hetero-element substituents. By the reaction of A with classical group 16 nucleophiles, complexes of the type [Cp*Fe(η4-P5MeE)] (E = OEt (1), OtBu (2), SPh (3), SePh (4)) are obtained.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!