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1.
Small ; 14(38): e1802307, 2018 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30146711

RESUMO

Bright supramolecular fluorescent organic nanoassemblies (FONs), based on strongly polar red-emissive benzothiadiazole fluorophores containing acidic units, are fabricated to serve as theranostic tools with large colloidal stability in the absence of a polymer or surfactant. High architectural cohesion is ensured by the multiple hydrogen-bonding networks, reinforced by the dipolar and hydrophobic interactions developed between the dyes. Such interactions are harnessed to ensure high payload encapsulation and efficient trapping of hydrophobic and hydrogen-bonding drugs like doxorubicin, as shown by steady state and time-resolved measurements. Fine tuning of the drug release in cancer cells is achieved by adjusting the structure and combination of the fluorophore acidic units. Notably delayed drug delivery is observed by confocal microscopy compared to the entrance of hydrosoluble doxorubicin, demonstrating the absence of undesirable burst release outside the cells by using FONs. Since FON-constituting fluorophores exhibit a large emission shift from red to green when dissociating in contact with the lipid cellular content, drug delivery could advantageously be followed by dual-color spectral detection, independently of the drug staining potentiality.


Assuntos
Doxorrubicina/química , Sistemas de Liberação de Medicamentos/métodos , Nanopartículas/química , Polímeros/química , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Microscopia Confocal
2.
Nanoscale ; 14(15): 5884-5898, 2022 Apr 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35373226

RESUMO

The impact of nanoparticle surface chemistry on cell interactions and especially cell uptake has become evident over the last few years in nanomedicine. Since PEG polymers have proved to be ideal tools for attaining stealthiness and favor escape from the in vivo mononuclear phagocytotic system, the accurate control of their geometry is of primary importance and can be achieved through reversible addition-fragmentation transfer (RAFT) polymerization. In this study, we demonstrate that the residual groups of the chain transfer agents (CTAs) introduced in the main chain exert a significant impact on the cellular internalization of functionalized nanoparticles. High-resolution magic angle spinning 1H NMR spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy permitted by the magneto-fluorescence properties of nanoassemblies (NAs) revealed the compaction of the PEG comb-like shell incorporating CTAs with a long alkyl chain, without changing the overall surface potential. As a consequence of the capability of alkyl units to self-assemble at the NA surface while hardly contributing more than 0.5% to the total polyelectrolyte weight, denser PEGylated NAs showed notably less internalization in all cells of the tumor microenvironment (tumor cells, macrophages and healthy cells). Interestingly, such differentiated uptake is also observed between pro-inflammatory M1-like and immunosuppressive M2-like macrophages, with the latter more efficiently phagocytizing NAs coated with a less compact PEGylated shell. In contrast, the NA diffusion inside multicellular spheroids, used to mimic solid tumors, appeared to be independent of the NA coating. These results provide a novel effort-saving approach where the sole variation of the chemical nature of CTAs in RAFT PEGylated polymers strikingly modulate the cell uptake of nanoparticles upon the organization of their surface coating and open the pathway toward selectively addressing macrophage populations for cancer immunotherapy.


Assuntos
Nanopartículas , Polímeros , Corantes , Nanopartículas/química , Polietilenoglicóis/química , Polimerização , Polímeros/química , Polímeros/farmacologia , Microambiente Tumoral
3.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 10(9)2020 Aug 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32847105

RESUMO

We present a 1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) relaxometry experimental investigation of two series of magnetic nanoparticles, constituted of a maghemite core with a mean diameter dTEM = 17 ± 2.5 nm and 8 ± 0.4 nm, respectively, and coated with four different negative polyelectrolytes. A full structural, morpho-dimensional and magnetic characterization was performed by means of Transmission Electron Microscopy, Atomic Force Microscopy and DC magnetometry. The magnetization curves showed that the investigated nanoparticles displayed a different approach to the saturation depending on the coatings, the less steep ones being those of the two samples coated with P(MAA-stat-MAPEG), suggesting the possibility of slightly different local magnetic disorders induced by the presence of the various polyelectrolytes on the particles' surface. For each series, 1H NMR relaxivities were found to depend very slightly on the surface coating. We observed a higher transverse nuclear relaxivity, r2, at all investigated frequencies (10 kHz ≤ νL ≤ 60 MHz) for the larger diameter series, and a very different frequency behavior for the longitudinal nuclear relaxivity, r1, between the two series. In particular, the first one (dTEM = 17 nm) displayed an anomalous increase of r1 toward the lowest frequencies, possibly due to high magnetic anisotropy together with spin disorder effects. The other series (dTEM = 8 nm) displayed a r1 vs. νL behavior that can be described by the Roch's heuristic model. The fitting procedure provided the distance of the minimum approach and the value of the Néel reversal time (τ ≈ 3.5 ÷ 3.9·10-9 s) at room temperature, confirming the superparamagnetic nature of these compounds.

4.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(36): 32808-32814, 2019 Sep 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31424916

RESUMO

The development of fluorescent organic nanoparticles, serving as bioimaging agents or drug cargos, represents a buoyant field of investigations. Nevertheless, their ulterior fate and structural integrity after cell uptake remain elusive. Toward this aim, we have elaborated original photoactive organic nanoparticles (dTEM ∼ 35-50 nm wide) with an off-on signal upon cellular internalization. Such nanoparticles are based on the noncovalent association of red-emitting benzothiadiazole (BDZ) derivatives and azo dyes, acting as fluorescence quenchers. Upon varying the azo/BDZ ratio, we found that quantitative emission quenching could be obtained with only a 0.2:1 azo/BDZ ratio and originated from exergonic oxidative and reductive photoinduced electron transfer from the azo units (ΔelG0 = -0.21 and -0.29 eV, respectively). Such results revisited the origin of emission quenching, often confusedly ascribed to Förster resonance energy transfer. A nonlinear and sharp drop of the emission intensity with the increase in the azo unit density n was observed and presents comparable evolution to a n-1/3 mathematical law. Thorough biological examinations involving cancer cells prove a receptor-independent endocytosis pathway, leading to progressive cell lighting upon nanoparticle accumulation in the late endosomal/lysosomal compartments. Complete emission recovery of the initially quenched azo/BDZ nanosystems could be achieved by using mefloquine, which caused endosomal/lysosomal disruption, and release of their content in the cytoplasm. Such results demonstrate that the dotlike emission from endosomes actually stems from fully dissociated individual dyes and not integer nanoparticles. They conclude on the high spatial confinement promoted by organelles and finally question its severe impact on functional compounds or nanoparticles whose properties are strongly distance dependent.


Assuntos
Compostos Azo/química , Endocitose , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Sondas Moleculares/química , Nanopartículas/química , Compostos Orgânicos/química , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Elétrons , Endossomos/metabolismo , Humanos , Tiadiazóis/química
5.
Nanoscale ; 9(45): 18094-18106, 2017 Nov 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29135000

RESUMO

The field of optical bioimaging has considerably flourished with the advent of sophisticated microscopy techniques and ultra-bright fluorescent tools. Fluorescent organic nanoparticles (FONs) have thus recently appeared as very attractive labels for their high payload, absence of cytotoxicity and eventual biodegradation. Nevertheless, their bioconjugation to target specific receptors with high imaging contrast is scarcely performed. Moreover, assessing the reality of bioconjugation represents high challenges given the sub-nanomolar concentrations resulting from the commonly adopted nanoprecipitation fabrication process. Here, we describe how the combination of a magnetic shell allows us to easily generate red-emitting FONs conjugated with the epidermal growth factor ligand (EGF), a small protein promoting cancer cell proliferation by activating the EGF receptor (EGFR) pathway. Dual color fluorescence correlation spectroscopy combined with immunofluorescence is originally harnessed in its time trace mode to unambiguously demonstrate covalent attachment between the FON and EGF at sub-nanomolar concentrations. Strong asymmetric clustering of EGF-conjugated FONs is observed at the membrane of MDA-MB-468 human breast cancer cells overexpressing EGF receptors using super-resolution fluorescence microscopy. Such high recruitment of EGF-conjugated FONs is attributed to their EGF multivalency (4.7 EGF per FON) which enables efficient EGFR activation and subsequent phosphorylation. The large hydrodynamic diameter (DH ∼ 301 nm) of EGF-conjugated FONs prevents immediate engulfment of the sequestered receptors, which provides very bright and localized spots in less than 30 minutes. The reported bioconjugated nanoassemblies could thus serve as ultra-bright probes of breast cancer cells with EGFR-overexpression that is often associated with poor prognosis.


Assuntos
Neoplasias da Mama/metabolismo , Nanoconjugados/química , Nanopartículas/química , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Proliferação de Células , Fator de Crescimento Epidérmico , Receptores ErbB/metabolismo , Fluorescência , Humanos
6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(16): 14242-14257, 2017 Apr 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28379690

RESUMO

Controlling the interactions of functional nanostructures with water and biological media represents high challenges in the field of bioimaging applications. Large contrast at low doses, high colloidal stability in physiological conditions, the absence of cell cytotoxicity, and efficient cell internalization represent strong additional needs. To achieve such requirements, we report on high-payload magnetofluorescent architectures made of a shell of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles tightly anchored around fluorescent organic nanoparticles. Their external coating is simply modulated using anionic polyelectrolytes in a final step to provide efficient magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and fluorescence imaging of live cells. Various structures of PEGylated polyelectrolytes have been synthesized and investigated, differing from their iron oxide complexing units (carboxylic vs phosphonic acid), their structure (block- or comblike), their hydrophobicity, and their fabrication process [conventional or reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT)-controlled radical polymerization] while keeping the central magnetofluorescent platforms the same. Combined photophysical, magnetic, NMRD, and structural investigations proved the superiority of RAFT polymer coatings containing carboxylate units and a hydrophobic tail to impart the magnetic nanoassemblies (NAs) with enhanced-MRI negative contrast, characterized by a high r2/r1 ratio and a transverse relaxation r2 equal to 21 and 125 s-1 mmol-1 L, respectively, at 60 MHz clinical frequency (∼1.5 T). Thanks to their dual modality, cell internalization of the NAs in mesothelioma cancer cells could be evidenced by both confocal fluorescence microscopy and magnetophoresis. A 72 h follow-up showed efficient uptake after 24 h with no notable cell mortality. These studies again pointed out the distinct behavior of RAFT polyelectrolyte-coated bimodal NAs that internalize at a slower rate with no adverse cytotoxicity. Extension to multicellular tumor cell spheroids that mimic solid tumors revealed the successful internalization of the NAs in the periphery cells, which provides efficient deep-imaging labels thanks to their induced T2* contrast, large emission Stokes shift, and bright dotlike signal, popping out of the strong spheroid autofluorescence.


Assuntos
Meios de Contraste/química , Ânions , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Nanopartículas , Neoplasias , Polietilenoglicóis
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