Synthesis and in vitro preliminary evaluation of prostate-specific membrane antigen targeted upconversion nanoparticles as a first step towards radio/fluorescence-guided surgery of prostate cancer
Author(s) -
Axel Cordonnier,
Damien Boyer,
Sophie Besse,
Rodolphe Valleix,
Rachid Mahiou,
Mercédès Quintana,
Arnaud Briat,
Mhammed Benbakkar,
Frédérique PenaultLlorca,
Aurélie MaisonialBesset,
Benoı̂t Maunit,
Sébastien Tarrit,
Magali Vivier,
Tiffany Witkowski,
Leslie Mazuel,
Françoise Degoul,
Elisabeth Miot-Noirault,
JeanMichel Chezal
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of materials chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.316
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 2050-7518
pISSN - 2050-750X
DOI - 10.1039/d1tb00777g
Subject(s) - lncap , biophysics , chemistry , nanoparticle , nanomedicine , materials science , combinatorial chemistry , nanotechnology , prostate cancer , medicine , biology , cancer
Over the last decade, upconversion nanoparticles (UCNP) have been widely investigated in nanomedicine due to their high potential as imaging agents in the near-infrared (NIR) optical window of biological tissues. Here, we successfully develop active targeted UCNP as potential probes for dual NIR-NIR fluorescence and radioactive-guided surgery of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)(+) prostate cancers. We designed a one-pot thermolysis synthesis method to obtain oleic acid-coated spherical NaYF 4 :Yb,Tm@NaYF 4 core/shell UCNP with narrow particle size distribution (30.0 ± 0.1 nm, as estimated by SAXS analysis) and efficient upconversion luminescence. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) ligands bearing different anchoring groups (phosphate, bis- and tetra-phosphonate-based) were synthesized and used to hydrophilize the UCNP. DLS studies led to the selection of a tetra-phosphonate PEG (2000) ligand affording water-dispersible UCNP with sustained colloidal stability in several aqueous media. PSMA-targeting ligands ( i.e. , glutamate-urea-lysine derivatives called KuEs) and fluorescent or radiolabelled prosthetic groups were grafted onto the UCNP surface by strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC). These UCNP, coated with 10 or 100% surface density of KuE ligands, did not induce cytotoxicity over 24 h incubation in LNCaP-Luc or PC3-Luc prostate cancer cell lines or in human fibroblasts for any of the concentrations evaluated. Competitive binding assays and flow cytometry demonstrated the excellent affinity of UCNP@KuE for PSMA-positive LNCaP-Luc cells compared with non-targeted UCNP@CO 2 H. Furthermore, the binding of UCNP@KuE to prostate tumour cells was positively correlated with the surface density of PSMA-targeting ligands and maintained after 125 I-radiolabelling. Finally, a preliminary biodistribution study in LNCaP-Luc-bearing mice demonstrated the radiochemical stability of non-targeted [ 125 I]UCNP paving the way for future in vivo assessments.
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