AI Article Synopsis

  • Biopsy is the standard but invasive method for diagnosing lymph node metastasis, while MRI has limitations in sensitivity due to the inability of clinical contrast agents to differentiate between healthy and cancerous lymph nodes.
  • Nanoparticles that target the C-C chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2), which is overexpressed in metastatic lymph nodes, could improve MRI sensitivity by guiding contrast agent delivery and taking advantage of cancer-triggered monocyte migration.
  • The study developed a specialized nanoparticle, MCP1-Gd, which showed a significant increase in MRI detection of metastasis in mouse models, highlighting improved targeting through monocyte hitchhiking for enhanced imaging results.

Article Abstract

Biopsy is the clinical standard for diagnosing lymph node (LN) metastasis, but it is invasive and poses significant risk to patient health. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been utilized as a noninvasive alternative but is limited by low sensitivity, with only ∼35% of LN metastases detected, as clinical contrast agents cannot discriminate between healthy and metastatic LNs due to nonspecific accumulation. Nanoparticles targeted to the C-C chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2), a biomarker highly expressed in metastatic LNs, have the potential to guide the delivery of contrast agents, improving the sensitivity of MRI. Additionally, cancer cells in metastatic LNs produce monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP1), which binds to CCR2 inflammatory monocytes and stimulates their migration. Thus, the molecular targeting of CCR2 may enable nanoparticle hitchhiking onto monocytes, providing an additional mechanism for metastatic LN targeting and early detection. Hence, we developed micelles incorporating gadolinium (Gd) and peptides derived from the CCR2-binding motif of MCP1 (MCP1-Gd) and evaluated the potential of MCP1-Gd to detect LN metastasis. When incubated with migrating monocytes , MCP1-Gd transport across lymphatic endothelium increased 2-fold relative to nontargeting controls. After administration into mouse models with initial LN metastasis and recurrent LN metastasis, MCP1-Gd detected metastatic LNs by increasing MRI signal by 30-50% relative to healthy LNs. Furthermore, LN targeting was dependent on monocyte hitchhiking, as monocyte depletion decreased accumulation by >70%. Herein, we present a nanoparticle contrast agent for MRI detection of LN metastasis mediated by CCR2-targeting and demonstrate the potential of monocyte hitchhiking for enhanced nanoparticle delivery.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.3c09201DOI Listing

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