Back to Search Start Over

Self-assembling dendrimer nanosystems for specific fluorine magnetic resonance imaging and effective theranostic treatment of tumors.

Authors :
Zhenbin Lyu
Ralahy, Brigino
Perles-Barbacaru, Teodora-Adriana
Ling Ding
Yifan Jiang
Baoping Lian
Roussel, Tom
Xi Liu
Galanakou, Christina
Laurini, Erik
Tintaru, Aura
Giorgio, Suzanne
Pricl, Sabrina
Xiaoxuan Liu
Bernard, Monique
Iovanna, Juan
Viola, Angèle
Ling Ping
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; 6/18/2024, Vol. 121 Issue 25, p1-39, 49p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Fluorine magnetic resonance imaging (<superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI) is particularly promising for biomedical applications owing to the absence of fluorine in most biological systems. However, its use has been limited by the lack of safe and water-soluble imaging agents with high fluorine contents and suitable relaxation properties. We report innovative <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI agents based on supramolecular dendrimers self-assembled by an amphiphilic dendrimer composed of a hydrophobic alkyl chain and a hydrophilic dendron. Specifically, this amphiphilic dendrimer bears multiple negatively charged terminals with high fluorine content, which effectively prevented intra- and intermolecular aggregation of fluorinated entities via electrostatic repulsion. This permitted high fluorine nuclei mobility alongside good water solubility with favorable relaxation properties for use in <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI. Importantly, the self-assembling <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI agent was able to encapsulate the near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) agent DiR and the anticancer drug paclitaxel for multimodal <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI and NIRF imaging of and theranostics for pancreatic cancer, a deadly disease for which there remains no adequate early detection method or efficacious treatment. The <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI and multimodal <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI and NIRF imaging studies on human pancreatic cancer xenografts in mice confirmed the capability of both imaging modalities to specifically image the tumors and demonstrated the efficacy of the theranostic agent in cancer treatment, largely outperforming the clinical anticancer drug paclitaxel. Consequently, these dendrimer nanosystems constitute promising <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI agents for effective cancer management. This study offers a broad avenue to the construction of <superscript>19</superscript>F-MRI agents and theranostics, exploiting self-assembling supramolecular dendrimer chemistry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
121
Issue :
25
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178198756
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2322403121