Publication | Closed Access
Cooperative Organization in Iron Oxide Multi-Core Nanoparticles Potentiates Their Efficiency as Heating Mediators and MRI Contrast Agents
398
Citations
65
References
2012
Year
NanoparticlesMagnetic PropertiesEngineeringMetal NanoparticlesPolymer-based MagnetMagnetic ResonanceBiomedical EngineeringChemistryStable SuspensionsFerrofluidMagnetismNanomedicineBiophysicsCooperative OrganizationMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyMagnetic HyperthermiaContrast AgentMagnetic MaterialMulti-core NanoparticlesMagnetic NanoparticlesMolecule-based MagnetNanomaterialsMri Contrast AgentsHeating MediatorsMedicineNanomagnetism
The role of nanoparticle architecture in magnetic nanostructures for diagnostics and therapy has been underexplored. This study shows that cooperative organization of multi‑core iron oxide nanoparticles enhances hyperthermic efficiency and MRI contrast. The authors synthesized maghemite multi‑core nanoparticles via a polyol method and fractionated them by size using electrostatic colloidal sorting to tune magnetic properties. Cooperative magnetic behavior in crystalline multi‑core iron oxide nanoparticles increases magnetic susceptibility, relaxivities, and thermal losses, enabling superior MRI tumor detection and hyperthermia treatment while remaining biocompatible.
In the pursuit of optimized magnetic nanostructures for diagnostic and therapeutic applications, the role of nanoparticle architecture has been poorly investigated. In this study, we demonstrate that the internal collective organization of multi-core iron oxide nanoparticles can modulate their magnetic properties in such a way as to critically enhance their hyperthermic efficiency and their MRI T(1) and T(2) contrast effect. Multi-core nanoparticles composed of maghemite cores were synthesized through a polyol approach, and subsequent electrostatic colloidal sorting was used to fractionate the suspensions by size and hence magnetic properties. We obtained stable suspensions of citrate-stabilized nanostructures ranging from single-core 10 nm nanoparticles to multi-core magnetically cooperative 30 nm nanoparticles. Three-dimensional oriented attachment of primary cores results in enhanced magnetic susceptibility and decreased surface disorder compared to individual cores, while preserving a superparamagnetic-like behavior of the multi-core structures and potentiating thermal losses. Exchange coupling in the multi-core nanoparticles modifies the dynamics of the magnetic moment in such a way that both the longitudinal and transverse NMR relaxivities are also enhanced. Long-term MRI detection of tumor cells and their efficient destruction by magnetic hyperthermia can be achieved thanks to a facile and nontoxic cell uptake of these iron oxide nanostructures. This study proves for the first time that cooperative magnetic behavior within highly crystalline iron oxide superparamagnetic multi-core nanoparticles can improve simultaneously therapeutic and diagnosis effectiveness over existing nanostructures, while preserving biocompatibility.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1