Seite - (000392) - in Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
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The employment of nanoparticulate systems to image and diagnose
cancer has been extensively applied and new approaches have been
developed (Choi, 2012). Some advantages of using nanoparticulate-
based probes for imaging purposes is attained to their low cytotoxicity
profiles and physicochemical properties (Santos, 2013a). In general, a
surface area-to-volume ratio and effective surface functionality, are
particularities used as tools to tune the nanoparticle properties for tissue
or cell targeting in vivo through high affinity to certain cell biomarkers
(Davis, 2008). Biochemical changes in vivo, such as enhanced receptor
density in a certain tumor type could be imaged and measured by
probing with specific nanoparticulate systems avid to bind to it (Jin,
2014; Satpathy, 2015). These probes shall attain certain features that
allow them to be detected and promote their accumulation at the site of
interest, be safe and biocompatible, as well as to have limited side
effects and to avoid the hostile environments encountered in vivo, such
as avoidance of interactions with plasma proteins and the recognition by
the phagocytic cells and consequent removal from the systemic
circulation by the mononuclear phagocyte system (Santos, 2013a). For
example, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs), along
with many other clinical applications, are some of the nanoparticulate
systems that are most used as highly effective contrast agents for MRI
diagnosis of solid tumors (Ittrich, 2013; Rosen, 2012). Compared to other
traditional contrast agents, SPIONs exhibit several advantageous
properties, among them the greater magnetic signal strength and longer
lasting contrast enhancement, low cytotoxic effects, biodegradability
and improved delineation of tumor margins (Corot, 2006; Varallyay,
2002; Wang, 2001). Such nanoparticulate systems have been used to
target solid tumors, either in a passive way, (Zolata, 2014), taking
advantage of the leaky and damaged tumor vasculature through the
enhanced permeability and retention effect (Brannon-Peppas, 2004;
Rosen, 2012), by targeting actively the tumor sites by attaching a
targeting ligand to the surface of the SPIONs, or by taking into account
the tumor pathological features, such its lower pH microenvironment.
The internalization of SPIONs enables a longer and effective imaging
time by improvement of the contrast-enhancing effect of the particles
through the accumulation of a high number of SPIONs in the tumor
tissue, therefore being a more promissing and sensitive molecular
Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Titel
- Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Autor
- Nuno Vale
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-046887-8
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 427
- Schlagwörter
- Physical Sciences, Engineering and Technology, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Green Chemistry
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Chemie