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From Nanothermometry to Bioimaging: Lanthanide-Activated KY 3 F 10 Nanostructures as Biocompatible Multifunctional Tools for Nanomedicine.

Chiara CressoniFederica VurroEmil MilanMatilde MuccilliFrancesco MazzerMarco GerosaFederico BoschiAntonello Enrico SpinelliDenis BadoccoPaolo PastoreNatalia Fernández DelgadoMiriam Herrera ColladoPasquina MarzolaAdolfo Speghini
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Lanthanide-activated fluoride-based nanostructures are extremely interesting multifunctional tools for many modern applications in nanomedicine, e.g., bioimaging, sensing, drug delivery, and photodynamic therapy. Importantly, environmental-friendly preparations using a green chemistry approach, as hydrothermal synthesis route, are nowadays highly desirable to obtain colloidal nanoparticles, directly dispersible in hydrophilic media, as physiological solution. The nanomaterials under investigation are new KY 3 F 10 -based citrate-capped core@shell nanostructures activated with several lanthanide ions, namely, Er 3+ , Yb 3+ , Nd 3+ , and Gd 3+ , prepared as colloidal water dispersions. A new facile microwave-assisted synthesis has been exploited for their preparation, with significant reduction of the reaction times and a fine control of the nanoparticle size. These core@shell multifunctional architectures have been investigated for use as biocompatible and efficient contrast agents for optical, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computerized tomography (CT) techniques. These multifunctional nanostructures are also efficient noninvasive optical nanothermometers. In fact, the lanthanide emission intensities have shown a relevant relative variation as a function of the temperature, in the visible and near-infrared optical ranges, efficiently exploiting ratiometric intensity methods for optical thermometry. Importantly, in contrast with other fluoride hosts, chemical dissolution of KY 3 F 10 citrate-capped nanocrystals in aqueous environment is very limited, of paramount importance for applications in biological fluids. Furthermore, due to the strong paramagnetic properties of lanthanides (e.g., Gd 3+ ), and X-ray absorption of both yttrium and lanthanides, the nanostructures under investigation are extremely useful for MRI and CT imaging. Biocompatibility studies of the nanomaterials have revealed very low cytotoxicity in dfferent human cell lines. All these features point to a successful use of these fluoride-based core@shell nanoarchitectures for simultaneous diagnostics and temperature sensing, ensuring an excellent biocompatibility.
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