Cu-Fe-Se Ternary Nanosheet-Based Drug Delivery Carrier for Multimodal Imaging and Combined Chemo/Photothermal Therapy of Cancer.
Xinxin JiangYaobao HanHao ZhangHanghang LiuQian HuangTingting WangQiao SunZhen LiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Ternary transition-metal chalcogenide nanosheets have shown great potential in diverse applications owing to their intrinsically amazing properties with a broad tunable window. Direct preparation of water-soluble and biocompatible ternary chalcogenide nanosheets for theranostic application remains a challenge. In this article, we prepared Cu-Fe-Se nanosheets (CFS NSs) in an aqueous solution under ambient conditions by a sequential coprecipitation method. They were functionalized with anticancer drug doxorubin (CFS@DOX) through electrostatic interactions and labeled with radioactive isotope 99mTc through surface coordination effect. The resulting nanosheets have a size of 70 nm and a thickness of 5 nm, and can be well dispersed in water, phosphate-buffered saline, 10% fetal bovine serum, and 0.9% NaCl with an excellent colloidal stability. They also exhibit a high photothermal conversion efficiency of 78.9% for in vitro and in vivo photoacoustic imaging and photothermal therapy. The isotope-labeled nanosheets (99mTc-CFS NSs) were used for single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography imaging to quantify their blood circulation time (∼4.7 h) and biodistributions in major organs, which follow an order of liver > bladder > lung > spleen > heart > kidney. The DOX-functionalized nanosheets (CFS@DOX) were used for chemotherapy of cancer and exhibited excellent anticancer efficacy. Our research shows the great promise of ternary metal chalcogenide nanosheets for combined imaging and therapy of cancer.
Keyphrases
- reduced graphene oxide
- metal organic framework
- transition metal
- quantum dots
- visible light
- aqueous solution
- computed tomography
- photodynamic therapy
- high resolution
- papillary thyroid
- gold nanoparticles
- drug delivery
- highly efficient
- squamous cell
- fluorescence imaging
- water soluble
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cancer therapy
- positron emission tomography
- stem cells
- spinal cord injury
- atrial fibrillation
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- squamous cell carcinoma
- mesenchymal stem cells
- locally advanced
- contrast enhanced
- artificial intelligence
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gas chromatography
- image quality
- drug induced
- human health