Bony Badrul Alam, Miller Hunter A, Tarudji Aria W, Gee Connor C, Sarella Anandakumar, Nichols Michael G, Kievit Forrest M
Department of Biological Systems Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 3605 Fair Street, Lincoln, Nebraska 68583-0726, United States.
Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 855 N 16th Street, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0298, United States.
ACS Omega. 2020 Jun 23;5(26):16220-16227. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.0c01890. eCollection 2020 Jul 7.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. TBI can have a long-term impact on the quality of life for survivors of all ages. However, there remains no approved treatment that improves outcomes following TBI, which is partially due to poor delivery of therapies into the brain. Therefore, there is a significant unmet need to develop more effective delivery strategies that increase the accumulation and retention of potentially efficacious treatments in the injured brain. Recent work has revealed that nanoparticles (NPs) may offer a promising approach for site-specific delivery; however, a detailed understanding of the specific NP properties that promote brain accumulation and retention are still being developed. Multimodal imaging plays a vital role in the understanding of physicochemical properties that initiate the uptake and accumulation of NPs in the brain at both high spatial (e.g., fluorescence imaging) and temporal (e.g., magnetic resonance imaging, MRI) frequency. However, many NP systems that are currently used in TBI only provide contrast in a single imaging modality limiting the imaging data that can be obtained, and those that offer multimodal imaging capabilities have complicated multistep synthesis methods. Therefore, the goal of this work was to develop an ultrasmall NP with simple fabrication capable of multimodal imaging. Here, we describe the development, characterization, accumulation, and retention of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-coated europium-gadolinium (Eu-Gd) mixed magnetic NPs (MNPs) in a controlled cortical impact mouse model of TBI. We find that these NPs having an ultrasmall core size of 2 nm and a small hydrodynamic size of 13.5 nm can be detected in both fluorescence and MR imaging modalities and rapidly accumulate and are retained in injured brain parenchyma. These NPs should allow for further testing of NP physicochemical properties that promote accumulation and retention in TBI and other disease models.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是全球范围内死亡和残疾的主要原因。TBI会对各年龄段幸存者的生活质量产生长期影响。然而,目前尚无经批准的可改善TBI后预后的治疗方法,部分原因是治疗药物难以输送到大脑。因此,迫切需要开发更有效的输送策略,以增加潜在有效治疗药物在受伤大脑中的蓄积和滞留。最近的研究表明,纳米颗粒(NPs)可能为靶向输送提供一种有前景的方法;然而,对于促进大脑蓄积和滞留的特定NP特性仍在深入研究。多模态成像在理解启动NPs在大脑中摄取和蓄积的物理化学性质方面起着至关重要的作用,无论是在高空间分辨率(如荧光成像)还是高时间分辨率(如磁共振成像,MRI)下。然而,目前用于TBI的许多NP系统仅在单一成像模态中提供对比度,限制了可获得的成像数据,而那些具有多模态成像能力的系统则具有复杂的多步合成方法。因此,本研究的目标是开发一种易于制备的、能够进行多模态成像的超小NP。在此,我们描述了聚乙二醇(PEG)包覆的铕-钆(Eu-Gd)混合磁性纳米颗粒(MNPs)在TBI的可控皮质撞击小鼠模型中的开发、表征、蓄积和滞留情况。我们发现,这些核心尺寸为2nm、流体动力学尺寸为13.5nm的超小NP在荧光和MR成像模态中均能被检测到,并能迅速在受伤的脑实质中蓄积和滞留。这些NP应有助于进一步测试促进TBI和其他疾病模型中蓄积和滞留的NP物理化学性质。