Publication | Closed Access
Recent Advances in Mapping the Sub-cellular Distribution of Metal-Based Anticancer Drugs
34
Citations
103
References
2011
Year
Drug TargetNanotherapeuticsEngineeringOncologic ImagingMicroscopyBiological Mass SpectrometryChemistryTumor BiologySub-cellular DistributionNanomedicineElectron MicroscopyTranslational Molecular ImagingChemodynamic TherapyBioimagingMetal-based Anticancer DrugsDestructive Fractionation TechniquesAnti-cancer AgentRecent AdvancesBiophysicsMolecular ImagingCancer ResearchNovel Imaging MethodTumor TargetingPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentNovel Metal-based ChemotherapeuticsBiomedical DiagnosticsMass SpectrometryBiomedical ImagingMedicineDrug Discovery
There are increasing reports of novel metal-based chemotherapeutics that have either improved cancer cell selectivity, or alternative mechanisms of action, to existing anticancer drugs, and techniques are required for determining their sub-cellular molecular targets. Imaging methods offer many distinct advantages over destructive fractionation techniques, including the preservation of useful morphological information; however, mapping the intracellular distribution of metal ions inside tumour cells still remains challenging. Recent advances in three modes of imaging are discussed in this review, with a particular focus on the application to metal-based cancer chemotherapy – fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy (including energy-filtered transmission electron microscopy (EFTEM)), and a new technique, Nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS).
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