Issue 36, 2015

Chelator free gallium-68 radiolabelling of silica coated iron oxide nanorods via surface interactions

Abstract

The commercial availability of combined magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)/positron emission tomography (PET) scanners for clinical use has increased demand for easily prepared agents which offer signal or contrast in both modalities. Herein we describe a new class of silica coated iron–oxide nanorods (NRs) coated with polyethylene glycol (PEG) and/or a tetraazamacrocyclic chelator (DO3A). Studies of the coated NRs validate their composition and confirm their properties as in vivo T2 MRI contrast agents. Radiolabelling studies with the positron emitting radioisotope gallium-68 (t1/2 = 68 min) demonstrate that, in the presence of the silica coating, the macrocyclic chelator was not required for preparation of highly stable radiometal-NR constructs. In vivo PET-CT and MR imaging studies show the expected high liver uptake of gallium-68 radiolabelled nanorods with no significant release of gallium-68 metal ions, validating our innovation to provide a novel simple method for labelling of iron oxide NRs with a radiometal in the absence of a chelating unit that can be used for high sensitivity liver imaging.

Graphical abstract: Chelator free gallium-68 radiolabelling of silica coated iron oxide nanorods via surface interactions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Apr 2015
Accepted
06 Aug 2015
First published
13 Aug 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 14889-14896

Author version available

Chelator free gallium-68 radiolabelling of silica coated iron oxide nanorods via surface interactions

B. P. Burke, N. Baghdadi, A. E. Kownacka, S. Nigam, G. S. Clemente, M. M. Al-Yassiry, J. Domarkas, M. Lorch, M. Pickles, P. Gibbs, R. Tripier, C. Cawthorne and S. J. Archibald, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 14889 DOI: 10.1039/C5NR02753E

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