Hyperthermia is one of the promising treatments for cancer therapy. However, the development of a magnetic fuid agent that can selectively target a tumor and efficiently elevate temperature while exhibiting excellent biocompatibility still remains challenging. Here a new core-shell nanostructure consisting of inorganic iron oxide (Fe 3 O 4) nanoparticles as the core, organic alginate as the shell, and cell-targeting ligands (ie, D-galactosamine) decorated on the outer surface (denoted as Fe 3 O 4 @Alg-GA nanoparticles) was prepared using a combination of a pre-gel method and coprecipitation in aqueous solution. After treatment with an AC magnetic feld, the results indicate that Fe 3 O 4 @Alg-GA nanoparticles had excellent hyperthermic efficacy in a human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (HepG2) owing to enhanced cellular uptake, and show great potential as therapeutic agents for future in vivo drug delivery systems.
CITATION STYLE
Liao, S. H., Liu, C. H., Bastakoti, B. P., Suzuki, N., Chang, Y., Yamauchi, Y., … Wu, K. C. W. (2015). Functionalized magnetic iron oxide/alginate core-shell nanoparticles for targeting hyperthermia. International Journal of Nanomedicine, 10, 3315–3328. https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S68719
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