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Advanced Functional Materials, Vol.24, No.37, 5911-5923, 2014
Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles: Selective Surface Functionalization for Optimal Relaxometric and Drug Loading Performances
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) have emerged as promising biomaterials for drug delivery and cell tracking applications, for which MRI is the medical imaging modality of choice. In this contribution, MRI contrast agents (DTPA-Gd) and polyethylene glycol (PEG) are grafted selectively at the surface of MSNs, in order to achieve optimal relaxometric and drug loading performances. In fact, DTPA and PEG grafting procedures reported until now, have resulted in significant pore obstruction, which is detrimental to the drug delivery function of MSNs. This usually induces a dramatic decrease in surface area and pore volume, thus limiting drug loading capacity. Therefore, these molecules must be selectively grafted at the outer surface of MSNs. In this study, 3D pore network MSNs (MCM-48-type) are synthesized and functionalized with a straightforward and efficient grafting procedure in which DTPA and PEG are selectively grafted at the outer surface of MSNs. No pore blocking is observed, and more than 90% of surface area, pore volume and pore diameter are retained. The thus-treated particles are colloidally stable in SBF and cell culture media, they are not cytotoxic and they have high drug loading capacity. Upon labeling with Gd, the nanoparticle suspensions have strong relaxometric properties (r(2)/r(1) = 1.47, r(1) = 23.97 mM(-1) s(-1)), which confers a remarkable positive contrast enhancement potential to the compound. The particles could serve as efficient drug carriers, as demonstrated with a model of daunorubicin submitted to physiological conditions. The selective nanoparticle surface grafting procedures described in the present article represent a significant advance in the design of high colloidal stability silica-based vectors with high drug loading capacity, which could provide novel theranostic nanocompounds.
Keywords:mesoporous silica nanoparticles;PEGylation;drug delivery;anti-cancer therapy;MRI contrast agents