Huang Ruimin, Harmsen Stefan, Samii Jason M, Karabeber Hazem, Pitter Kenneth L, Holland Eric C, Kircher Moritz F
1. Department of Radiology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10065, USA;
2. Cancer Biology and Genetics Program, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10065, USA;
Theranostics. 2016 May 7;6(8):1075-84. doi: 10.7150/thno.13842. eCollection 2016.
The dismal prognosis of patients with malignant brain tumors such as glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is attributed mostly to their diffuse growth pattern and early microscopic tumor spread to distant regions of the brain. Because the microscopic tumor foci cannot be visualized with current imaging modalities, it remains impossible to direct treatments optimally. Here we explored the ability of integrin-targeted surface-enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy (SERRS) nanoparticles to depict the true tumor extent in a GBM mouse model that closely mimics the pathology in humans. The recently developed SERRS-nanoparticles have a sensitivity of detection in the femtomolar range. An RGD-peptide-conjugated version for integrin-targeting (RGD-SERRS) was compared directly to its non-targeted RAD-SERRS control in the same mice via Raman multiplexing. Pre-blocking with RGD peptide before injection of RGD-SERRS nanoparticles was used to verify the specificity of integrin-targeting. In contrast to the current belief that the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect results in a baseline uptake of nanoparticles regardless of their surface chemistry, integrin-targeting was shown to be highly specific, with markedly lower accumulation after pre-blocking. While the non-targeted SERRS particles enabled delineation of the main tumor, the RGD-SERRS nanoparticles afforded a major improvement in visualization of the true extent and the diffuse margins of the main tumor. This included the detection of unexpected tumor areas distant to the main tumor, tracks of migrating cells of 2-3 cells in diameter, and even isolated distant tumor cell clusters of less than 5 cells. This Raman spectroscopy-based nanoparticle-imaging technology holds promise to allow high precision visualization of the true extent of malignant brain tumors.
多形性胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)等恶性脑肿瘤患者的预后不佳,主要归因于其弥漫性生长模式以及肿瘤在显微镜下早期扩散至脑内远处区域。由于目前的成像方式无法可视化显微镜下的肿瘤病灶,因此仍然无法实现最佳的靶向治疗。在此,我们探索了整合素靶向表面增强共振拉曼光谱(SERRS)纳米颗粒在一种紧密模拟人类病理学的GBM小鼠模型中描绘真实肿瘤范围的能力。最近开发的SERRS纳米颗粒具有飞摩尔范围内的检测灵敏度。通过拉曼多路复用,将用于整合素靶向的RGD肽偶联版本(RGD-SERRS)与其在同一只小鼠中的非靶向RAD-SERRS对照直接进行比较。在注射RGD-SERRS纳米颗粒之前用RGD肽进行预封闭,以验证整合素靶向的特异性。与目前认为增强的渗透和滞留(EPR)效应会导致纳米颗粒无论其表面化学性质如何都会有基线摄取的观点相反,整合素靶向显示出高度特异性,预封闭后积累明显更低。虽然非靶向SERRS颗粒能够勾勒出主要肿瘤,但RGD-SERRS纳米颗粒在可视化主要肿瘤的真实范围和弥漫边缘方面有了重大改进。这包括检测到距离主要肿瘤较远的意外肿瘤区域、直径为2 - 3个细胞的迁移细胞轨迹,甚至是少于5个细胞的孤立远处肿瘤细胞簇。这种基于拉曼光谱的纳米颗粒成像技术有望实现对恶性脑肿瘤真实范围的高精度可视化。