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1.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 50(10): 1573-1584, 2024 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39060156

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: Perfluorocarbon nanodroplets (NDs) have been widely investigated as both diagnostic and therapeutic agents. There remains, however, a challenge in generating NDs that do not vaporize spontaneously but can be activated at ultrasound pressures that do not produce unwanted bioeffects. In previous work, it has been shown that phospholipid-coated perfluorobutane (PFB) NDs can potentially overcome this challenge. The aim of this study was to investigate whether these NDs can promote drug delivery. METHODS: A combination of high-speed optical imaging and passive cavitation detection was used to study the acoustic properties of the PFB-NDs in a tissue mimicking phantom. PFB-NDs were exposed to ultrasound at frequencies from 0.5 to 1.5 MHz and peak negative pressures from 0.5 to 3.5 MPa. In addition, the penetration depth of two model drugs (Nile Red and 200 nm diameter fluorescent polymer spheres) into the phantom was measured. RESULTS: PFB NDs were found to be stable in aqueous suspension at both 4°C and 37°C; their size remaining unchanged at 215 ± 11 nm over 24 h. Penetration of both model drugs in the phantom was found to increase with increasing ultrasound peak negative pressure and decreasing frequency and was found to be positively correlated with the energy of acoustic emissions. Extravasation depths >1 mm were observed at 0.5 MHz with pressures <1 MPa. CONCLUSION: The results of the study thus suggest that PFB NDs can be used both as drug carriers and as nuclei for cavitation to enhance drug delivery without the need for high intensity ultrasound.


Sujet(s)
Fluorocarbones , Fantômes en imagerie , Fluorocarbones/composition chimique , Nanoparticules , Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes
2.
Invest Radiol ; 59(5): 379-390, 2024 May 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37843819

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to demonstrate 3-dimensional (3D) acoustic wave sparsely activated localization microscopy (AWSALM) of microvascular flow in vivo using phase change contrast agents (PCCAs). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three-dimensional AWSALM using acoustically activable PCCAs was evaluated on a crossed tube microflow phantom, the kidney of New Zealand White rabbits, and the brain of C57BL/6J mice through intact skull. A mixture of C 3 F 8 and C 4 F 10 low-boiling-point fluorocarbon gas was used to generate PCCAs with an appropriate activation pressure. A multiplexed 8-MHz matrix array connected to a 256-channel ultrasound research platform was used for transmitting activation and imaging ultrasound pulses and recording echoes. The in vitro and in vivo echo data were subsequently beamformed and processed using a set of customized algorithms for generating 3D super-resolution ultrasound images through localizing and tracking activated contrast agents. RESULTS: With 3D AWSALM, the acoustic activation of PCCAs can be controlled both spatially and temporally, enabling contrast on demand and capable of revealing 3D microvascular connectivity. The spatial resolution of the 3D AWSALM images measured using Fourier shell correlation is 64 µm, presenting a 9-time improvement compared with the point spread function and 1.5 times compared with half the wavelength. Compared with the microbubble-based approach, more signals were localized in the microvasculature at similar concentrations while retaining sparsity and longer tracks in larger vessels. Transcranial imaging was demonstrated as a proof of principle of PCCA activation in the mouse brain with 3D AWSALM. CONCLUSIONS: Three-dimensional AWSALM generates volumetric ultrasound super-resolution microvascular images in vivo with spatiotemporal selectivity and enhanced microvascular penetration.


Sujet(s)
Produits de contraste , Microscopie , Souris , Animaux , Lapins , Souris de lignée C57BL , Son (physique) , Acoustique , Échographie/méthodes , Microbulles
3.
J Control Release ; 337: 371-377, 2021 09 10.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34274382

RÉSUMÉ

Treatment options for patients with pancreatic cancer are limited and survival prospects have barely changed over the past 4 decades. Chemoradiation treatment (CRT) has been used as neoadjuvant therapy in patients with borderline resectable disease to reduce tumour burden and increase the proportion of patients eligible for surgery. Antimetabolite drugs such as gemcitabine and 5-fluorouracil are known to sensitise pancreatic tumours to radiation treatment. Likewise, photodynamic therapy (PDT) has also been shown to enhance the effect of radiation therapy. However, PDT is limited to treating superficial lesions due to the attenuation of light by tissue. The ability of the related technique, sonodynamic therapy (SDT), to enhance CRT was investigated in two murine models of pancreatic cancer (PSN-1 and BxPC-3) in this study. SDT uses low intensity ultrasound to activate an otherwise non-toxic sensitiser, generating toxic levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) locally. It is applicable to greater target depths than PDT due to the ability of ultrasound to propagate further than light in tissue. Both CRT and the combination of CRT plus SDT delayed tumour growth in the two tumour models. In the PSN-1 model, but not the BxPC-3 model, the combination treatment caused an increase in survival relative to CRT alone (p = 0.038). The improvement in survival conferred by the addition of SDT in this model may be related to differences in tumour architecture between the two models. MRI and US images showed that PSN-1 tumours were less well perfused and vascularised than BxPC-3 tumours. This poor vascularisation may explain why PSN-1 tumours were more susceptible to the effects of vascular damage exerted by SDT treatment.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du pancréas , Photothérapie dynamique , Ultrasonothérapie , Animaux , Fluorouracil/usage thérapeutique , Humains , Souris , Tumeurs du pancréas/traitement médicamenteux , Espèces réactives de l'oxygène
4.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 47(7): 1826-1843, 2021 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33820668

RÉSUMÉ

A combination of ultrahigh-speed optical imaging (5 × 106 frames/s), B-mode ultrasound and passive cavitation detection was used to study the vaporization process and determine both the acoustic droplet vaporization (ADV) and inertial cavitation (IC) thresholds of phospholipid-coated perfluorobutane nanodroplets (PFB NDs, diameter = 237 ± 16 nm). PFB NDs have not previously been studied with ultrahigh-speed imaging and were observed to form individual microbubbles (1-10 µm) within two to three cycles and subsequently larger bubble clusters (10-50 µm). The ADV and IC thresholds did not statistically significantly differ and decreased with increasing pulse length (20-20,000 cycles), pulse repetition frequency (1-100 Hz), concentration (108-1010 NDs/mL), temperature (20°C-45°C) and decreasing frequency (1.5-0.5 MHz). Overall, the results indicate that at frequencies of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 MHz, PFB NDs can be vaporized at moderate peak negative pressures (<2.0 MPa), pulse lengths and pulse repetition frequencies. This finding is encouraging for the use of PFB NDs as cavitation agents, as these conditions are comparable to those required to achieve therapeutic effects with microbubbles, unlike those reported for higher-boiling-point NDs. The differences between the optically and acoustically determined ADV thresholds, however, suggest that application-specific thresholds should be defined according to the biological/therapeutic effect of interest.


Sujet(s)
Acoustique , Fluorocarbones , Nanoparticules , Imagerie optique , Phospholipides , Volatilisation , Imagerie optique/méthodes
5.
Mol Ther Oncolytics ; 21: 47-61, 2021 Jun 25.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33869742

RÉSUMÉ

Vaccinia virus (VV) is a powerful tool for cancer treatment with the potential for tumor tropism, efficient cell-to-cell spread, rapid replication in cancer cells, and stimulation of anti-tumor immunity. It has a well-defined safety profile and is being assessed in late-stage clinical trials. However, VV clinical utility is limited by rapid bloodstream neutralization and poor penetration into tumors. These factors have often restricted its route of delivery to intratumoral or intrahepatic artery injection and may impede repeat dosing. Chemical stealthing improves the pharmacokinetics of non-enveloped viruses, but it has not yet been applied to enveloped viruses such as VV. In the present study, amphiphilic polymer was used to coat VV, leading to reduced binding of a neutralizing anti-VV antibody (81.8% of polymer-coated VV [PCVV] staining positive versus 97.1% of VV [p = 0.0038]). Attachment of anti-mucin-1 (aMUC1) targeting antibody, to give aMUC1-PCVV, enabled binding of the construct to MUC1. In high MUC1 expressing CAPAN-2 cells, infection with PCVV was reduced compared to VV, while infection was restored with aMUC1-PCVV. Pharmacokinetics of aMUC1-PCVV, PCVV, and VV were evaluated. After intravenous (i.v.) injection of 1 × 108 viral genomes (VG) or 5 × 108 VG, circulation time for PCVV and aMUC1-PCVV was increased, with ~5-fold higher circulating dose at 5 min versus VV.

6.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 47(6): 1596-1615, 2021 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33707089

RÉSUMÉ

In this study we compared three different microbubble-based approaches to the delivery of a widely used chemotherapy drug, gemcitabine: (i) co-administration of gemcitabine and microbubbles (Gem+MB); (ii) conjugates of microbubbles and gemcitabine-loaded liposomes (GemlipoMB); and (iii) microbubbles with gemcitabine directly bound to their surfaces (GembioMB). Both in vitro and in vivo investigations were carried out, respectively, in the RT112 bladder cancer cell line and in a murine orthotopic muscle-invasive bladder cancer model. The in vitro (in vivo) ultrasound exposure conditions were a 1 (1.1) MHz centre frequency, 0.07 (1.0) MPa peak negative pressure, 3000 (20,000) cycles and 100 (0.5) Hz pulse repetition frequency. Ultrasound exposure produced no significant increase in drug uptake either in vitro or in vivo compared with the drug-only control for co-administered gemcitabine and microbubbles. In vivo, GemlipoMB prolonged the plasma circulation time of gemcitabine, but only GembioMB produced a statistically significant increase in cleaved caspase 3 expression in the tumor, indicative of gemcitabine-induced apoptosis.


Sujet(s)
Antimétabolites antinéoplasiques/administration et posologie , Antimétabolites antinéoplasiques/pharmacocinétique , Désoxycytidine/analogues et dérivés , Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes , Microbulles , Ultrasonothérapie , Tumeurs de la vessie urinaire/métabolisme , Tumeurs de la vessie urinaire/thérapie , Animaux , Antimétabolites antinéoplasiques/usage thérapeutique , Désoxycytidine/administration et posologie , Désoxycytidine/pharmacocinétique , Désoxycytidine/usage thérapeutique , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Femelle , Souris , Souris nude , Cellules cancéreuses en culture ,
7.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys ; 109(5): 1472-1482, 2021 04 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33714528

RÉSUMÉ

PURPOSE: Chemoradiation therapy is the standard of care in muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). Although agents such as gemcitabine can enhance tumor radiosensitivity, their side effects can limit patient eligibility and treatment efficacy. This study investigates ultrasound and microbubbles for targeting gemcitabine delivery to reduce normal-tissue toxicity in a murine orthotopic MIBC model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: CD1-nude mice were injected orthotopically with RT112 bladder tumor cells. Conventional chemoradiation involved injecting gemcitabine (10 mg/kg) before 6 Gy targeted irradiation of the bladder area using the Small Animal Radiation Research Platform (SARRP). Ultrasound-mediated gemcitabine delivery (10 mg/kg gemcitabine) involved either coadministration of microbubbles with gemcitabine or conjugating gemcitabine onto microbubbles followed by exposure to ultrasound (1.1 MHz center frequency, 1 MPa peak negative pressure, 1% duty cycle, and 0.5 Hz pulse repetition frequency) before SARRP irradiation. The effect of ultrasound and microbubbles alone was also tested. Tumor volumes were measured by 3D ultrasound imaging. Acute normal-tissue toxicity from 12 Gy to the lower bowel area was assessed using an intestinal crypt assay in mice culled 3.75 days posttreatment. RESULTS: A significant delay in tumor growth was observed with conventional chemoradiation therapy and both microbubble groups (P < .05 compared with the radiation-only group). Transient weight loss was seen in the microbubble groups, which resolved within 10 days posttreatment. A positive correlation was found between weight loss on day 3 posttreatment and tumor growth delay (P < .05; R2 = 0.76). In contrast with conventional chemoradiation therapy, ultrasound-mediated drug delivery methods did not exacerbate the acute intestinal toxicity using the crypt assay. CONCLUSIONS: Ultrasound and microbubbles offer a promising new approach for improving chemoradiation therapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer, maintaining a delay in tumor growth but with reduced acute intestinal toxicity compared with conventional chemoradiation therapy.


Sujet(s)
Antimétabolites antinéoplasiques/administration et posologie , Chimioradiothérapie/effets indésirables , Désoxycytidine/analogues et dérivés , Organes à risque/effets des radiations , Lésions radiques/prévention et contrôle , Tumeurs de la vessie urinaire/thérapie , Animaux , Antimétabolites antinéoplasiques/effets indésirables , Biotinylation , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Chimioradiothérapie/méthodes , Produits de contraste/administration et posologie , Désoxycytidine/administration et posologie , Désoxycytidine/effets indésirables , Désoxycytidine/synthèse chimique , Femelle , Humains , Intestins/effets des radiations , Souris , Souris nude , Microbulles , Invasion tumorale , Charge tumorale , Échographie , Vessie urinaire/anatomopathologie , Tumeurs de la vessie urinaire/imagerie diagnostique , Tumeurs de la vessie urinaire/anatomopathologie ,
8.
Nanomedicine (Lond) ; 16(1): 37-50, 2021 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33426913

RÉSUMÉ

Aims: Testing ultrasound-mediated cavitation for enhanced delivery of the therapeutic antibody cetuximab to tumors in a mouse model. Methods: Tumors with strong EGF receptor expression were grown bilaterally. Cetuximab was coadministered intravenously with cavitation nuclei, consisting of either the ultrasound contrast agent Sonovue or gas-stabilizing nanoscale SonoTran Particles. One of the two tumors was exposed to focused ultrasound. Passive acoustic mapping localized and monitored cavitation activity. Both tumors were then excised and cetuximab concentration was quantified. Results: Cavitation increased tumoral cetuximab concentration. When nucleated by Sonovue, a 2.1-fold increase (95% CI 1.3- to 3.4-fold) was measured, whereas SonoTran Particles gave a 3.6-fold increase (95% CI 2.3- to 5.8-fold). Conclusions: Ultrasound-mediated cavitation, especially when nucleated by nanoscale gas-entrapping particles, can noninvasively increase site-specific delivery of therapeutic antibodies to solid tumors.


Sujet(s)
Nanoparticules , Tumeurs , Animaux , Produits de contraste , Hétérogreffes , Humains , Souris , Tumeurs/imagerie diagnostique , Tumeurs/traitement médicamenteux , Échographie
9.
Cancer Cell ; 39(2): 257-275.e6, 2021 02 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33476581

RÉSUMÉ

Given the immune system's importance for cancer surveillance and treatment, we have investigated how it may be affected by SARS-CoV-2 infection of cancer patients. Across some heterogeneity in tumor type, stage, and treatment, virus-exposed solid cancer patients display a dominant impact of SARS-CoV-2, apparent from the resemblance of their immune signatures to those for COVID-19+ non-cancer patients. This is not the case for hematological malignancies, with virus-exposed patients collectively displaying heterogeneous humoral responses, an exhausted T cell phenotype and a high prevalence of prolonged virus shedding. Furthermore, while recovered solid cancer patients' immunophenotypes resemble those of non-virus-exposed cancer patients, recovered hematological cancer patients display distinct, lingering immunological legacies. Thus, while solid cancer patients, including those with advanced disease, seem no more at risk of SARS-CoV-2-associated immune dysregulation than the general population, hematological cancer patients show complex immunological consequences of SARS-CoV-2 exposure that might usefully inform their care.


Sujet(s)
COVID-19/immunologie , Tumeurs/immunologie , Tumeurs/virologie , Syndrome respiratoire aigu sévère/immunologie , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , COVID-19/étiologie , COVID-19/mortalité , Femelle , Tumeurs hématologiques/immunologie , Tumeurs hématologiques/mortalité , Tumeurs hématologiques/thérapie , Tumeurs hématologiques/virologie , Humains , Immunophénotypage , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Partie nasale du pharynx/virologie , Tumeurs/mortalité , Tumeurs/thérapie , Syndrome respiratoire aigu sévère/étiologie , Syndrome respiratoire aigu sévère/mortalité , Syndrome respiratoire aigu sévère/virologie , Lymphocytes T/virologie , Excrétion virale , Jeune adulte
10.
J Control Release ; 317: 23-33, 2020 01 10.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31733295

RÉSUMÉ

Recent pre-clinical studies have demonstrated the potential of combining chemotherapy and sonodynamic therapy for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. Oxygen-loaded magnetic microbubbles have been explored as a targeted delivery vehicle for this application. Despite preliminary positive results, a previous study identified a significant practical challenge regarding the co-alignment of the magnetic and ultrasound fields. The aim of this study was to determine whether this challenge could be addressed through the use of a magnetic-acoustic device (MAD) combining a magnetic array and ultrasound transducer in a single unit, to simultaneously concentrate and activate the microbubbles at the target site. in vitro experiments were performed in tissue phantoms and followed by in vivo treatment of xenograft pancreatic cancer (BxPC-3) tumours in a murine model. In vitro, a 1.4-fold (p < .01) increase in the deposition of a model therapeutic payload within the phantom was achieved using the MAD compared to separate magnetic and ultrasound devices. In vivo, tumours treated with the MAD had a 9% smaller mean volume 8 days after treatment, while tumours treated with separate devices or microbubbles alone were respectively 45% and 112% larger. This substantial and sustained decrease in tumour volume suggests that the proposed drug delivery approach has the potential to be an effective neoadjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer patients.


Sujet(s)
Microbulles , Tumeurs du pancréas , Acoustique , Animaux , Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments , Humains , Phénomènes magnétiques , Souris , Tumeurs du pancréas/traitement médicamenteux
11.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2058: 7-29, 2020.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31486029

RÉSUMÉ

The optimal clinical exploitation of viruses as gene therapy or oncolytic vectors will require them to be administered intravenously. Strategies must therefore be deployed to enable viruses to survive the harsh neutralizing environment of the bloodstream and achieve deposition within and throughout target tissues or tumor deposits. This chapter describes the genetic and chemical engineering approaches that are being developed to overcome these challenges.


Sujet(s)
Thérapie génétique , Vecteurs génétiques/génétique , Thérapie virale de cancers , Virus oncolytiques/génétique , Animaux , Protéines de capside/composition chimique , Protéines de capside/génétique , Protéines de capside/métabolisme , Thérapie génétique/méthodes , Vecteurs génétiques/composition chimique , Humains , Thérapie virale de cancers/méthodes , Polyéthylène glycols/composition chimique , Polymères/composition chimique , Ingénierie des protéines
12.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 45(4): 954-967, 2019 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30655109

RÉSUMÉ

Ultrasound-induced cavitation has been proposed as a strategy to tackle the challenge of inadequate extravasation, penetration and distribution of therapeutics into tumours. Here, the ability of microbubbles, droplets and solid gas-trapping particles to facilitate mass transport and extravasation of a model therapeutic agent following ultrasound-induced cavitation is investigated. Significant extravasation and penetration depths on the order of millimetres are achieved with all three agents, including the range of pressures and frequencies achievable with existing clinical ultrasound systems. Deeper but highly directional extravasation was achieved with frequencies of 1.6 and 3.3 MHz compared with 0.5 MHz. Increased extravasation was observed with increasing pulse length and exposure time, while an inverse relationship is observed with pulse repetition frequency. No significant cell death or any haemolytic activity in human blood was observed at clinically relevant concentrations for any of the agents. Overall, solid gas-trapping nanoparticles were found to enable the most extensive extravasation for the lowest input acoustic energy, followed by microbubbles and then droplets. The ability of these agents to produce sustained inertial cavitation activity whilst being small enough to follow the drug out of the circulation and into diseased tissue, combined with a good safety profile and the possibility of real-time monitoring, offers considerable potential for enhanced drug delivery of unmodified drugs in oncological and other biomedical applications.


Sujet(s)
Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes , Microbulles , Nanoparticules/administration et posologie , Phospholipides/administration et posologie , Sonication/méthodes , Hexafluorure de soufre/administration et posologie , Fantômes en imagerie
13.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(2): 1829-1840, 2019 Jan 16.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30574777

RÉSUMÉ

The advancement of ultrasound-mediated therapy has stimulated the development of drug-loaded microbubble agents that can be targeted to a region of interest through an applied magnetic field prior to ultrasound activation. However, the need to incorporate therapeutic molecules while optimizing the responsiveness to both magnetic and acoustic fields and maintaining adequate stability poses a considerable challenge for microbubble synthesis. The aim of this study was to evaluate three different methods for incorporating iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) into phospholipid-coated microbubbles using (1) hydrophobic IONPs within an oil layer below the microbubble shell, (2) phospholipid-stabilized IONPs within the shell, or (3) hydrophilic IONPs noncovalently bound to the surface of the microbubble. All microbubbles exhibited similar acoustic response at both 1 and 7 MHz. The half-life of the microbubbles was more than doubled by the addition of IONPs by using both surface and phospholipid-mediated loading methods, provided the lipid used to coat the IONPs was the same as that constituting the microbubble shell. The highest loading of IONPs per microbubble was also achieved with the surface loading method, and these microbubbles were the most responsive to an applied magnetic field, showing a 3-fold increase in the number of retained microbubbles compared to other groups. For the purpose of drug delivery, surface loading of IONPs could restrict the attachment of hydrophilic drugs to the microbubble shell, but hydrophobic drugs could still be incorporated. In contrast, although the incorporation of phospholipid IONPs produced more weakly magnetic microbubbles, it would not interfere with hydrophilic drug loading on the surface of the microbubble.

14.
Int J Nanomedicine ; 13: 4345-4359, 2018.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30100719

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Molecular MRI is an evolving field of research with strong translational potential. Selection of the appropriate MRI sequence, field strength and contrast agent depend largely on the application. The primary aims of the current study were to: 1) assess the sensitivity of different MRI sequences for detection of iron oxide particles in mouse brain; 2) determine the effect of magnetic field strength on detection of iron oxide particles in vivo; and 3) compare the sensitivity of targeted microparticles of iron oxide (MPIO) or ultra-small superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) for detection of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) in vivo. METHODS: Mice were injected intrastriatally with interleukin 1ß to induce VCAM-1 expression on the cerebral vasculature. Subsequently, animals were injected intravenously with either VCAM-MPIO or VCAM-USPIO and imaged 1 or 13 hours post-injection, respectively. MRI was performed at 4.7, 7.0, or 9.4 T, using three different T2*-weighted sequences: single gradient echo 3D (GE3D), multi-gradient echo 3D (MGE3D) and balanced steady-state free precession 3D (bSSFP3D). RESULTS: MGE3D yielded the highest signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) for the detection of iron oxide particles. All sequences showed a significant increase in SNR and CNR from 4.7 to 7.0 T, but no further improvement at 9.4 T. However, whilst targeted MPIO enabled sensitive detection of VCAM-1 expression on the cerebral vasculature, the long half-life (16.5 h vs 1.2 min) and lower relaxivity per particle (1.29×10-14 vs 1.18×10-9 Hz L/particle) of USPIO vs. MPIO rendered them impractical for molecular MRI. CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrate clear advantages of MPIO compared to USPIO for molecularly-targeted MRI, and indicate that the MGE3D sequence is optimal for MPIO detection. Moreover, higher field strengths (7.0/9.4 T) showed enhanced sensitivity over lower field strengths (4.7 T). With the development of biodegradable MPIO, these agents hold promise for clinical translation.


Sujet(s)
Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Animaux , Encéphale/métabolisme , Produits de contraste/composition chimique , Femelle , Composés du fer III/composition chimique , Nanoparticules de magnétite/composition chimique , Souris de lignée BALB C , Rapport signal-bruit , Molécule-1 d'adhérence des cellules vasculaires/métabolisme
15.
Adv Healthc Mater ; 7(12): e1800184, 2018 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29696808

RÉSUMÉ

The efficient penetration of drugs into tumors is a major challenge that remains unmet. Reported herein is a strategy to promote extravasation and enhanced penetration using inertial cavitation initiated by focused ultrasound and cone-shaped gold nanoparticles that entrap gas nanobubbles. The cones are capable of initiating inertial cavitation under pressures and frequencies achievable with existing clinical ultrasound systems and of promoting extravasation and delivery of a model large therapeutic molecule in an in vitro tissue mimicking flow phantom, achieving penetration depths in excess of 2 mm. Ease of functionalization and intrinsic imaging capabilities provide gold with significant advantages as a material for biomedical applications. The cones show neither cytotoxicity in Michigan Cancer Foundation (MCF)-7 cells nor hemolytic activity in human blood at clinically relevant concentrations and are found to be colloidally stable for at least 5 d at 37 °C and several months at 4 °C.


Sujet(s)
Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes , Or , Nanoparticules métalliques , Tumeurs/traitement médicamenteux , Ondes ultrasonores , Or/composition chimique , Or/pharmacologie , Humains , Cellules MCF-7 , Nanoparticules métalliques/composition chimique , Nanoparticules métalliques/usage thérapeutique , Tumeurs/métabolisme , Tumeurs/anatomopathologie
16.
Int J Nanomedicine ; 13: 337-349, 2018.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29391793

RÉSUMÉ

The treatment of cancer using nanomedicines is limited by the poor penetration of these potentially powerful agents into and throughout solid tumors. Externally controlled mechanical stimuli, such as the generation of cavitation-induced microstreaming using ultrasound (US), can provide a means of improving nanomedicine delivery. Notably, it has been demonstrated that by focusing, monitoring and controlling the US exposure, delivery can be achieved without damage to surrounding tissue or vasculature. However, there is a risk that such stimuli may disrupt the structure and thereby diminish the activity of the delivered drugs, especially complex antibody and viral-based nanomedicines. In this study, we characterize the impact of cavitation on four different agents, doxorubicin (Dox), cetuximab, adenovirus (Ad) and vaccinia virus (VV), representing a scale of sophistication from a simple small-molecule drug to complex biological agents. To achieve tight regulation of the level and duration of cavitation exposure, a "cavitation test rig" was designed and built. The activity of each agent was assessed with and without exposure to a defined cavitation regime which has previously been shown to provide effective and safe delivery of agents to tumors in preclinical studies. The fluorescence profile of Dox remained unchanged after exposure to cavitation, and the efficacy of this drug in killing a cancer cell line remained the same. Similarly, the ability of cetuximab to bind its epidermal growth factor receptor target was not diminished following exposure to cavitation. The encoding of the reporter gene luciferase within the Ad and VV constructs tested here allowed the infectivity of these viruses to be easily quantified. Exposure to cavitation did not impact on the activity of either virus. These data provide compelling evidence that the US parameters used to safely and successfully delivery nanomedicines to tumors in preclinical models do not detrimentally impact on the structure or activity of these nanomedicines.


Sujet(s)
Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes , Science des ultrasons/méthodes , Adenoviridae , Lignée cellulaire , Cétuximab/administration et posologie , Cétuximab/composition chimique , Doxorubicine/administration et posologie , Vecteurs génétiques/administration et posologie , Vecteurs génétiques/composition chimique , Humains , Nanomédecine/méthodes , Virus de la vaccine
17.
ACS Omega ; 2(3): 994-1002, 2017 Mar 31.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28393132

RÉSUMÉ

Giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) are well-established model systems for studying membrane structure and dynamics. Electroformation, also referred to as electroswelling, is one of the most prevalent methods for producing GUVs, as it enables modulation of the lipid hydration process to form relatively monodisperse, defect-free vesicles. Currently, however, it is expensive and time-consuming compared with other methods. In this study, we demonstrate that 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine GUVs can be prepared readily at a fraction of the cost on stainless steel electrodes, such as commercially available syringe needles, without any evidence of lipid oxidation or hydrolysis.

18.
Nanoscale ; 5(13): 6106-16, 2013 Jul 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23728482

RÉSUMÉ

PEGylated and non-PEGylated ORMOSIL nanoparticles prepared by microemulsion condensation of vinyltriethoxy-silane (VTES) were investigated in detail for their micro-structure and ability to deliver photoactive agents. With respect to pure silica nanoparticles, organic modification substantially changes the microstructure and the surface properties. This in turn leads to a modulation of both the photophysical properties of embedded photosensitizers and the interaction of the nanoparticles with biological entities such as serum proteins. The flexibility of the synthetic procedure allows the rapid preparation and screening of multifunctional nanosystems for photodynamic therapy (PDT). Selective targeting of model cancer cells was tested by using folate, an integrin specific RGD peptide and anti-EGFR antibodies. Data suggest the interference of the stealth-conferring layer (PEG) with small targeting agents, but not with bulky antibodies. Moreover, we showed that selective photokilling of tumour cells may be limited even in the case of efficient targeting because of intrinsic transport limitations of active cellular uptake mechanisms or suboptimum localization.


Sujet(s)
Systèmes de délivrance de médicaments/méthodes , Nanoparticules/composition chimique , Tumeurs/traitement médicamenteux , Photothérapie dynamique/méthodes , Photosensibilisants , Siloxanes , Anticorps antitumoraux/composition chimique , Anticorps antitumoraux/pharmacologie , Récepteurs ErbB/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Cellules HeLa , Cellules endothéliales de la veine ombilicale humaine , Humains , Tumeurs/métabolisme , Tumeurs/anatomopathologie , Oligopeptides/composition chimique , Oligopeptides/pharmacologie , Photosensibilisants/composition chimique , Photosensibilisants/pharmacologie , Polyéthylène glycols/composition chimique , Polyéthylène glycols/pharmacologie , Siloxanes/composition chimique , Siloxanes/pharmacologie
19.
Org Lett ; 14(12): 2984-7, 2012 Jun 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22630166

RÉSUMÉ

NanoChlor, a nanoparticle-based fluorescent probe for chloride that is both ratiometric and capable of spontaneously penetrating neuronal cells at submillimolar concentrations, was designed and studied. NanoChlor is built on silica nanoparticles grafted with 6-methoxyquinolinium as the chloride-sensitive component and fluorescein as the reference dye. A Stern-Volmer constant of 50 M(-1) was measured in Ringer's buffer at pH 7.2, and the response to chemically induced chloride currents was recorded in real time in hippocampal cells.


Sujet(s)
Chlorures/composition chimique , Espace intracellulaire/composition chimique , Nanoparticules/composition chimique , Quinoléinium, composés/composition chimique , Silice/composition chimique , Animaux , Lignée cellulaire , Espace intracellulaire/métabolisme , Microscopie électronique à transmission , Structure moléculaire , Nanoparticules/ultrastructure , Quinoléinium, composés/métabolisme
20.
Nanoscale ; 3(1): 121-33, 2011 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20967324

RÉSUMÉ

Fluorescent chemosensors are chemical systems that can detect and signal the presence of selected analytes through variations in their fluorescence emission. Their peculiar properties make them arguably one of the most useful tools that chemistry has provided to biomedical research, enabling the intracellular monitoring of many different species for medical and biological purposes. In its simplest design, a fluorescent chemosensor is composed of a fluorescent dye and a receptor, with a built-in transduction mechanism that converts recognition events into variations of the emission properties of the fluorescent dye. As soon as fluorescent nanoparticles became available, several applications in the field of sensing were explored. Nanoparticles have been used not only as better-performing substitutes of traditional dyes but also as multivalent scaffolds for the realization of supramolecular assemblies, while their high surface to volume ratio allows for distinct spatial domains (bulk, external surface, pores and shells) to be functionalized to a comparable extent with different organic species. Over the last few years, nanoparticles proved to be versatile synthetic platforms for the implementation of new sensing schemes.


Sujet(s)
Colorants fluorescents/composition chimique , Nanoparticules/composition chimique , Composés du cadmium/composition chimique , Transfert d'énergie par résonance de fluorescence , Boîtes quantiques , Composés du sélénium/composition chimique , Silice/composition chimique , Spectrométrie de fluorescence
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