Functionalized magnetic iron oxide/alginate core-shell nanoparticles for targeting hyperthermia

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Abstract

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.

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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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