The recent advances in molecular imaging techniques, using cancer-targeting nanoparticle probes, provide noninvasive tracking information on cancer cells in living subjects. Here, we report a multimodal cancer-targeted imaging system capable of concurrent fluorescence imaging, radionuclide imaging, and MRI in vivo. Methods: A cobalt-ferrite nanoparticle surrounded by fluorescent rhodamine (designated MF) within a silica shell matrix was synthesized with the AS1411 aptamer (MF-AS1411) that targets nucleolin (a cellular membrane protein highly expressed in cancer) using N-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-N-ethylcarbodiimide (EDC). This purified MF-AS1411 particle was bound with 2-(p-isothio-cyanatobenzyl)-1,4, 7-triazacyclonane-1,4,7-triacetic acid ( p-SCN-bn-NOTA) chelating agent and further labeled with 67Ga-citrate (MFR-AS1411). The shape and size distribution of MFR-AS1411 were characterized by transmission electron microscope (TEM). The cellular distribution of the nucleolin protein using the MFR-AS1411 nanoparticle was detected by fluorescence confocal microscopy. Phantom MR images were obtained as the concentration of MFR-AS1411 increased, using a 1.5-T MRI scanner. In vivo 67Ga radionuclide imaging and MRI were performed using a γ-camera and a 1.5-TMR imager, respectively. Results: TEM imaging revealed MF and MFR-AS1411 to be spheric and well dispersed. The purified MFR-AS1411 nanoparticle showed specific fluorescence signals in nucleolin-expressing C6 cells, compared with MFR-AS1411 mutant (MFR-AS1411mt)-treated C6 cells. The rhodamine fluorescence intensity and 67Ga activity of MFR-AS1411 were enhanced in a dose-dependent manner as the concentration of MFR-AS1411 was increased. The 67Ga radionuclide was detected in both thighs of the mice injected with MFR-AS1411, whereas the MFR-AS1411 mutant (MFR-AS1411mt) administration revealed rapid clearance via the bloodstream, demonstrating that MFR-AS1411 specifically targeted cancer cells. Bioluminescence images in the C6 cells, stably expressing the luciferase gene, illustrated the in vivo distribution. T2-weighted MRimages of the same mice injected with MFR-AS1411 showed dark T2 signals inside the tumor region, compared with the MRI signal of the tumor region injected with MFR-AS1411mt particles. Conclusion: We developed a nanoparticle-based cancer-specific imaging probe using the AS1411 aptamer in vivo and in vitro. This multimodal targeting imaging strategy, using a cancer-specific AS1411 aptamer, can be used as a versatile imaging tool for specific cancer diagnosis. Copyright © 2010 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Hwang, D. W., Ko, H. Y., Lee, J. H., Kang, H., Ryu, S. H., Song, I. C., … Kim, S. (2010). A nucleolin-targeted multimodal nanoparticle imaging probe for tracking cancer cells using an aptamer. Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 51(1), 98–105. https://doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.109.069880
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