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Anti-KIT DNA aptamer-conjugated porous silicon nanoparticles for the targeted detection of gastrointestinal stromal tumors.

Sanahan VijayakumarSeyedmehdi H NasrJacob E DavisEdward WangJonathan M ZuidemaYi-Sheng LuYu-Hwa LoJason K SicklickMichael J SailorPartha Ray
Published in: Nanoscale (2022)
Evaluation of Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors (GIST) during initial clinical staging, surgical intervention, and postoperative management can be challenging. Current imaging modalities ( e.g. , PET and CT scans) lack sensitivity and specificity. Therefore, advanced clinical imaging modalities that can provide clinically relevant images with high resolution would improve diagnosis. KIT is a tyrosine kinase receptor overexpressed on GIST. Here, the application of a specific DNA aptamer targeting KIT, decorated onto a fluorescently labeled porous silicon nanoparticle (pSiNP), is used for the in vitro & in vivo imaging of GIST. This nanoparticle platform provides high-fidelity GIST imaging with minimal cellular toxicity. An in vitro analysis shows greater than 15-fold specific KIT protein targeting compared to the free KIT aptamer, while in vivo analyses of GIST-burdened mice that had been injected intravenously (IV) with aptamer-conjugated pSiNPs show extensive nanoparticle-to-tumor signal co-localization (>90% co-localization) compared to control particles. This provides an effective platform for which aptamer-conjugated pSiNP constructs can be used for the imaging of KIT-expressing cancers or for the targeted delivery of therapeutics.
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