Penetration of endothelial cell coated multicellular tumor spheroids by iron oxide nanoparticles

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Abstract

Iron oxide nanoparticles are a useful diagnostic contrast agent and have great potential for therapeutic applications. Multiple emerging diagnostic and therapeutic applications and the numerous versatile parameters of the nanoparticle platform require a robust biological model for characterization and assessment. Here we investigate the use of iron oxide nanoparticles that target tumor vasculature, via the tumstatin peptide, in a novel three-dimensional tissue culture model. The developed tissue culture model more closely mimics the in vivo envi-ronment with a leaky endothelium coating around a glioma tumor mass. Tumstatin-iron oxide nanoparticles showed penetration and selective targeting to endothelial cell coating on the tumor in the three-dimensional model, and had approximately 2 times greater uptake in vitro and 2.7 times tumor neo-vascularization inhibition. Tumstatin provides targeting and thera-peutic capabilities to the iron oxide nanoparticle diagnostic contrast agent platform. And the novel endothelial cell-coated tumor model provides an in vitro microtissue environment to evaluate nanoparticles without moving into costly and time-consuming animal models. © Ivyspring International Publisher.

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APA

Ho, D. N., Kohler, N., Sigdel, A., Kalluri, R., Morgan, J. R., Xu, C., & Sun, S. (2012). Penetration of endothelial cell coated multicellular tumor spheroids by iron oxide nanoparticles. Theranostics, 2(1), 66–75. https://doi.org/10.7150/thno.3568

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