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A Folate-Conjugated Dual-Modal Fluorescent Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast Agent that Targets Activated Macrophages In Vitro and In Vivo.

Author
Abstract
:

Mucin-1 (MUC1), a transmembrane glycoprotein is aberrantly expressed on ∼90% of breast cancer and is an excellent target for nanoparticulate targeted imaging. In this study, the development of a dye-doped NIR emitting mesoporous silica nanoparticles platform conjugated to tumor-specific MUC1 antibody (ab-tMUC1-NIR-MSN) for in vivo optical detection of breast adenocarcinoma tissue is reported. The structural properties, the in vitro and in vivo performance of this nanoparticle-based probe were evaluated. In vitro studies showed that the MSN-based optical imaging nanoprobe is non-cytotoxic and targets efficiently mammary cancer cells overexpressing human tMUC1 protein. In vivo experiments with female C57BL/6 mice indicated that this platform accumulates mainly in the liver and did not induce short-term toxicity. In addition, we demonstrated that the ab-tMUC1-NIR-MSN nanoprobe specifically detects mammary gland tumors overexpressing human tMUC1 in a human MUC1 transgenic mouse model.

Year of Publication
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2016
Journal
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Journal of biomedical nanotechnology
Volume
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12
Issue
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12
Number of Pages
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2161-71
ISSN Number
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1550-7033
Short Title
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J Biomed Nanotechnol
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