Publications

Albumin-based nanoparticles as magnetic resonance contrast agents: I. Concept, first syntheses and characterisation

Author(s)
M.M. Stollenwerk, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, Christian Kremser, Heribert Talasz, Gudrun C. Thurner, A.A. Abdelmoez, Evelyn A. Wallnöfer, Anna Helbok, E. Neuhauser, N. Klammsteiner, Elisabeth Von Guggenberg, E. Fröhlich, Bernhard Keppler, Werner Jaschke, Paul Debbage
Abstract

To develop a platform for molecular magnetic resonance imaging, we prepared gadolinium-bearing albumin-polylactic acid nanoparticles in the size range 20-40 nm diameter. Iterative cycles of design and testing upscaled the synthesis procedures to gram amounts for physicochemical characterisation and for pharmacokinetic testing. Morphological analyses showed that the nanoparticles were spheroidal with rough surfaces. Particle sizes were measured by direct transmission electron microscopical measurements from negatively contrasted preparations, and by use of photon correlation spectroscopy; the two methods each documented nanoparticle sizes less than 100 nm and generally 10-40 nm diameter, though with significant intrabatch and interbatch variability. The particles' charge sufficed to hold them in suspension. HSA retained its tertiary structure in the particles. The nanoparticles were stable against turbulent flow conditions and against heat, though not against detergents. MRI imaging of liquid columns was possible at nanoparticle concentrations below 10 mg/ml. The particles were non-cytotoxic, non-thrombogenic and non-immunogenic in a range of assay systems developed for toxicity testing of nanoparticles. They were micellar prior to lyophilisation, but loosely structured aggregated masses after lyophilisation and subsequent resuspension. These nanoparticles provide a platform for further development, based on non-toxic materials of low immunogenicity already in clinical use, not expensive, and synthesized using methods which can be upscaled for industrial production.

Organisation(s)
Department of Inorganic Chemistry
External organisation(s)
Malmö University, Medizinische Universität Innsbruck, Assiut University, Medizinische Universität Graz
Journal
Histochemistry and Cell Biology
Volume
133
Pages
375-404
No. of pages
30
ISSN
0948-6143
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00418-010-0676-z
Publication date
2010
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
104003 Inorganic chemistry, 301114 Cell biology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/ed545d8c-26fd-40c1-ba95-0454b96db09b

Projects

Albumin-based nanoparticles as magnetic resonance contrast agents: I. Concept, first syntheses and characterisation

Author(s)
M.M. Stollenwerk, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, Christian Kremser, Heribert Talasz, Gudrun C. Thurner, A.A. Abdelmoez, Evelyn A. Wallnöfer, Anna Helbok, E. Neuhauser, N. Klammsteiner, Elisabeth Von Guggenberg, E. Fröhlich, Bernhard Keppler, Werner Jaschke, Paul Debbage
Abstract

To develop a platform for molecular magnetic resonance imaging, we prepared gadolinium-bearing albumin-polylactic acid nanoparticles in the size range 20-40 nm diameter. Iterative cycles of design and testing upscaled the synthesis procedures to gram amounts for physicochemical characterisation and for pharmacokinetic testing. Morphological analyses showed that the nanoparticles were spheroidal with rough surfaces. Particle sizes were measured by direct transmission electron microscopical measurements from negatively contrasted preparations, and by use of photon correlation spectroscopy; the two methods each documented nanoparticle sizes less than 100 nm and generally 10-40 nm diameter, though with significant intrabatch and interbatch variability. The particles' charge sufficed to hold them in suspension. HSA retained its tertiary structure in the particles. The nanoparticles were stable against turbulent flow conditions and against heat, though not against detergents. MRI imaging of liquid columns was possible at nanoparticle concentrations below 10 mg/ml. The particles were non-cytotoxic, non-thrombogenic and non-immunogenic in a range of assay systems developed for toxicity testing of nanoparticles. They were micellar prior to lyophilisation, but loosely structured aggregated masses after lyophilisation and subsequent resuspension. These nanoparticles provide a platform for further development, based on non-toxic materials of low immunogenicity already in clinical use, not expensive, and synthesized using methods which can be upscaled for industrial production.

Organisation(s)
Department of Inorganic Chemistry
External organisation(s)
Malmö University, Medizinische Universität Innsbruck, Assiut University, Medizinische Universität Graz
Journal
Histochemistry and Cell Biology
Volume
133
Pages
375-404
No. of pages
30
ISSN
0948-6143
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00418-010-0676-z
Publication date
2010
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
104003 Inorganic chemistry, 301114 Cell biology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/ed545d8c-26fd-40c1-ba95-0454b96db09b

Talks

Albumin-based nanoparticles as magnetic resonance contrast agents: I. Concept, first syntheses and characterisation

Author(s)
M.M. Stollenwerk, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, Christian Kremser, Heribert Talasz, Gudrun C. Thurner, A.A. Abdelmoez, Evelyn A. Wallnöfer, Anna Helbok, E. Neuhauser, N. Klammsteiner, Elisabeth Von Guggenberg, E. Fröhlich, Bernhard Keppler, Werner Jaschke, Paul Debbage
Abstract

To develop a platform for molecular magnetic resonance imaging, we prepared gadolinium-bearing albumin-polylactic acid nanoparticles in the size range 20-40 nm diameter. Iterative cycles of design and testing upscaled the synthesis procedures to gram amounts for physicochemical characterisation and for pharmacokinetic testing. Morphological analyses showed that the nanoparticles were spheroidal with rough surfaces. Particle sizes were measured by direct transmission electron microscopical measurements from negatively contrasted preparations, and by use of photon correlation spectroscopy; the two methods each documented nanoparticle sizes less than 100 nm and generally 10-40 nm diameter, though with significant intrabatch and interbatch variability. The particles' charge sufficed to hold them in suspension. HSA retained its tertiary structure in the particles. The nanoparticles were stable against turbulent flow conditions and against heat, though not against detergents. MRI imaging of liquid columns was possible at nanoparticle concentrations below 10 mg/ml. The particles were non-cytotoxic, non-thrombogenic and non-immunogenic in a range of assay systems developed for toxicity testing of nanoparticles. They were micellar prior to lyophilisation, but loosely structured aggregated masses after lyophilisation and subsequent resuspension. These nanoparticles provide a platform for further development, based on non-toxic materials of low immunogenicity already in clinical use, not expensive, and synthesized using methods which can be upscaled for industrial production.

Organisation(s)
Department of Inorganic Chemistry
External organisation(s)
Malmö University, Medizinische Universität Innsbruck, Assiut University, Medizinische Universität Graz
Journal
Histochemistry and Cell Biology
Volume
133
Pages
375-404
No. of pages
30
ISSN
0948-6143
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00418-010-0676-z
Publication date
2010
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
104003 Inorganic chemistry, 301114 Cell biology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/ed545d8c-26fd-40c1-ba95-0454b96db09b