The systemic delivery of composite nanoparticles remains an outstanding challenge in cancer nanomedicine, and the principal reason is a complex interplay of biological barriers. In this regard, adaptive cell transfer may represent an alternative solution to circumvent these barriers down to the tumor microenvironment. Here, tumor-tropic macrophages are proposed as a tool to draw and vehiculate modular nanoparticles integrating magnetic and plasmonic components. The end result is a bionic shuttle that exhibits a plasmonic band within the so-called therapeutic window arising from as much as 40 pg Au per cell, magnetization in the order of 150 pemu per cell, and more than 90% of the pristine viability and chemotactic activity of its biological component, until at least two days of preparation. Its synergistic combination of plasmonic, magnetic and tumor-tropic functions is assessed in vitro for applications as magnetic guidance or sorting, with a propulsion around 4 ?m s-1 for a magnetic gradient of 0.8 T m-1, the optical hyperthermia of cancer, with stability of photothermal conversion to temperatures exceeding 50?C, and the photoacoustic imaging of cancer under realistic conditions. These results collectively suggest that a bionic design may be a promising roadmap to reconcile the efforts for multifunctionality and targeted delivery, which are both key goals in nanomedicine.

A bionic shuttle carrying multi-modular particles and holding tumor-tropic features

Borri C.;Albino M.;Innocenti C.;Cavigli L.;Centi S.;Sangregorio C.
;
Ratto F.
;
Pini R.
2020

Abstract

The systemic delivery of composite nanoparticles remains an outstanding challenge in cancer nanomedicine, and the principal reason is a complex interplay of biological barriers. In this regard, adaptive cell transfer may represent an alternative solution to circumvent these barriers down to the tumor microenvironment. Here, tumor-tropic macrophages are proposed as a tool to draw and vehiculate modular nanoparticles integrating magnetic and plasmonic components. The end result is a bionic shuttle that exhibits a plasmonic band within the so-called therapeutic window arising from as much as 40 pg Au per cell, magnetization in the order of 150 pemu per cell, and more than 90% of the pristine viability and chemotactic activity of its biological component, until at least two days of preparation. Its synergistic combination of plasmonic, magnetic and tumor-tropic functions is assessed in vitro for applications as magnetic guidance or sorting, with a propulsion around 4 ?m s-1 for a magnetic gradient of 0.8 T m-1, the optical hyperthermia of cancer, with stability of photothermal conversion to temperatures exceeding 50?C, and the photoacoustic imaging of cancer under realistic conditions. These results collectively suggest that a bionic design may be a promising roadmap to reconcile the efforts for multifunctionality and targeted delivery, which are both key goals in nanomedicine.
2020
Istituto di Chimica dei Composti OrganoMetallici - ICCOM -
Istituto di Fisica Applicata - IFAC
Inglese
117
111338
111338
10
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928493120332562?via=ihub
Esperti anonimi
Cobalt ferrite
Core-shell nanoparticles
Drug delivery
Gold
Macrophages
Elettronico
9
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Borri, C.; Albino, M.; Innocenti, C.; Pineider, F.; Cavigli, L.; Centi, S.; Sangregorio, C.; Ratto, F.; Pini, R.
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/407154
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