Published January 1, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Trimetallic nanocomposites developed for efficient in vivo bimodal imaging via fluorescence and magnetic resonance

  • 1. Department of Experimental Physics, Faculty of Science, Palacky´ University Olomouc, trˇ. 17. Listopadu 12, 77900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
  • 2. Institut klinicke a experimentalni mediciny
  • 3. Department of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Palacky´ University Olomouc, tr ˇ. 17. Listopadu 12, 77900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
  • 4. Department of Histology and Embryology, The Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Ruska´ 87, 100 00 Prague, Czech Republic
  • 5. Faculty of Health Studies, Technical University of Liberec, Studentska 1402/2, 46117 Liberec, Czech Republic

Description

Despite several attempts, in vivo bimodal imaging still represents a challenge. Generally, it is accepted that dual-modality in imaging can improve sensitivity and spatial resolution, namely, when exploiting fluorescence (FI) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), respectively. Here, a newly developed combination of (i) protein-protected luminescent Au-Ag nanoclusters (LGSN) manifesting themselves by fluorescent emission at 705 nm and (ii) superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPION) embedded within the same protein and creating contrast in MR images, has been investigated in phantoms and applied for in vivo bimodal imaging of a mouse as a proof of principle. Unique LGSN-SPION nanocomposites were synthesized in a specific sequential one-pot green preparation procedure and characterized thoroughly using many physicochemical experimental techniques. The influence of LGSN-SPION samples on the viability of healthy cells (RPE-1) was tested using a calcein assay. Despite the presence of Ag (0.12 mg mL(-1)), high content of Au (above 0.75 mg mL(-1)), and moderate concentrations of Fe (0.24 mg mL(-1)), LGSN-SPION samples (containing approx. 15 mg mL(-1) of albumin) were revealed as biocompatible (cell viability above 80%). Simultaneously, these concentration values of all components in the LGSN-SPION nanocomposite were used for achieving both MRI and fluorescence signals in phantoms as well as in a living mouse with sufficiently high resolution. Thus, the LGSN-SPION samples can serve as new efficient bimodal FI and MRI probes for in vivo imaging.

Notes

 Financial support by the Czech Science Foundation (project no. 19-03207S), by the Ministry of Health CR-DRO (Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine IKEM, IN00023001), by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (Programme EXCELES, Project no. LX22NPO5104– Funded by the European Union– Next Generation EU) and by the Internal Grant Agency of Palacky´ University (projects no. IGA_PrF_2024_002) is grate fully acknowledged. The authors acknowledge the assistance provided by the Research Infrastructure NanoEnviCz, supported by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic under project no. LM2018124.

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39072712 (PMID)
Is part of
2050-750X (ISSN)
2050-7518 (ISSN)
References
10.1039/d4tb00655k (DOI)