Nafion-Based Nanocarriers for Fluorine Magnetic Resonance Imaging

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Abstract

The aim of our study was to develop a novel method for nanocarriers' preparation as a fluorine magnetic resonance imaging (19F MRI)-detectable drug delivery system. The novelty of the proposed approach is based on the application of fluorinated polyelectrolyte Nafion as a contrast agent since typical MRI contrast agents are based on paramagnetic gadolinium or ferro/superparamagnetic iron oxide compounds. An advantage of using an 19F-based tracer comes from the fact that the 19F image is detected at a different resonance frequency than the 1H image. In addition, the close to zero natural concentration of 19F nuclei in the human body makes fluorine atoms a promising MRI marker without any natural background signal. That creates the opportunity to localize and identify only exogenous fluorinated compounds with 100% specificity. The nanocarriers were formed by the deposition of polyelectrolytes on nanoemulsion droplets via the layer-by-layer technique with the saturation approach. The polyelectrolyte multilayer shell was composed of Nafion, the fluorinated ionic polymer used for labeling by 19F nuclei, and poly-l-lysine (PLL). The surface of such prepared nanocarriers was further pegylated by adsorption of pegylated polyanion, poly-l-glutamic acid (PGA). The 19F MRI-detectable hydrophobic nanocarriers with an average size of 170 nm and a sufficient signal-To-noise ratio have been developed and optimized to be used for passive tumor targeting and drug delivery.

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Szczȩch, M., Łopuszyńska, N., Tomal, W., Jasiński, K., Wȩglarz, W. P., Warszyński, P., & Szczepanowicz, K. (2020). Nafion-Based Nanocarriers for Fluorine Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Langmuir, 36(32), 9534–9539. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c01512

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