Polyethyleneimine-modified iron oxide nanoparticles for brain tumor drug delivery using magnetic targeting and intra-carotid administration.

Biomaterials

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1065, USA.

Published: August 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the use of polyethyleneimine (PEI)-modified magnetic nanoparticles (GPEI) as a drug/gene carrier for targeting brain tumors, showing good cell association and low toxicity in lab tests.
  • Despite promising magnetic properties, GPEI struggled to effectively accumulate in brain tumors after intravenous administration due to poor pharmacokinetics, indicated by low plasma levels.
  • Intra-carotid administration combined with magnetic targeting significantly improved GPEI entrapment in tumors, outperforming other nanoparticles, suggesting potential for future brain drug/gene delivery methods.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to examine the applicability of polyethyleneimine (PEI)-modified magnetic nanoparticles (GPEI) as a potential vascular drug/gene carrier to brain tumors. In vitro, GPEI exhibited high cell association and low cell toxicity--properties which are highly desirable for intracellular drug/gene delivery. In addition, a high saturation magnetization of 93 emu/g Fe was expected to facilitate magnetic targeting of GPEI to brain tumor lesions. However, following intravenous administration, GPEI could not be magnetically accumulated in tumors of rats harboring orthotopic 9L-gliosarcomas due to its poor pharmacokinetic properties, reflected by a negligibly low plasma AUC of 12 +/- 3 microg Fe/ml min. To improve "passive" GPEI presentation to brain tumor vasculature for subsequent "active" magnetic capture, we examined the intra-carotid route as an alternative for nanoparticle administration. Intra-carotid administration in conjunction with magnetic targeting resulted in 30-fold (p=0.002) increase in tumor entrapment of GPEI compared to that seen with intravenous administration. In addition, magnetic accumulation of cationic GPEI (zeta-potential = + 37.2 mV) in tumor lesions was 5.2-fold higher (p=0.004) than that achieved with slightly anionic G100 (zeta-potential= -12 mV) following intra-carotid administration, while no significant accumulation difference was detected between the two types of nanoparticles in the contra-lateral brain (p=0.187). These promising results warrant further investigation of GPEI as a potential cell-permeable, magnetically-responsive platform for brain tumor delivery of drugs and genes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2896060PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2010.04.043DOI Listing

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