AI Article Synopsis

  • Magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (MNPs) were developed and stabilized with three organic acids (tartaric, malic, ascorbic) for biocompatibility and specific binding to cancer cells.
  • Among these, MNPs coated with ascorbic acid (MNPs-AA) showed the best characteristics in size, surface charge, and stability, and they could bind to tumor cells via GLUTs receptors.
  • MNPs-AA were tested in MRI as a contrast agent and in vitro with human colon cancer cells, proving to be an effective contrast agent without harming cell functions or being cytotoxic.

Article Abstract

Magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (MNPs) have been prepared and stabilized with three organic acids (tartaric, malic and ascorbic) in order to obtain biocompatible and water dispersible MNPs with potential to bind specifically to tumoral cancer cells. An in deep characterization was performed aiming to verify the presence and effect of the coating and stabilizer on MNPs surface. Besides the mechanisms followed by the different acids to bind MNPs were elucidated and used to justify the differences in the physicochemical properties of each formulation. Data related to characterization revealed that MNPs coated with ascorbic acid (MNPs-AA) resulted the most suitable in terms of their size, surface charge and stability along the time. Besides, ascorbic acid may be recognized by GLUTs receptors that are overexpressed in several kinds of tumoral cells. Therefore, MNPs-AA was selected to explore its performance in both MRI and in vitro assays using human colon cancer cells HCT 116. MRI experiments were performed in clinical equipment using a series of aqueous dispersions of MNPs-AA that were evaluated as T contrast agent. The T- weighted images obtained as well as the calculated r2, indicated that MNPs-AA could act as efficient T contrast agent for MRI. Regarding in vitro assays, MNPs-AA did not alter the cellular function neither exert cytotoxicity using the three explored doses. The internalization of the nanoparticles on the cellular structure was confirmed quanti and qualitatively using atomic absorption spectroscopy and Prussian blue techniques respectively. From these results, it emerges that ascorbic acid coated-magnetite nanoparticles may be used as alternative contrast agent to avoid or minimize some toxicological issues related to the widely used gadolinium.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.06.044DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ascorbic acid
12
contrast agent
12
physicochemical properties
8
performance mri
8
cancer cells
8
mri vitro
8
vitro assays
8
mnps
5
mnps-aa
5
selective contrast
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!