Near infrared biomimetic hybrid magnetic nanocarrier for MRI-guided thermal therapy
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Cell-membrane hybrid nanoparticles (NPs) are designed to
improve drug delivery, thermal therapy, and immunotherapy for several
diseases. Here, we report the development of distinct biomimetic magnetic
nanocarriers containing magnetic nanoparticles encapsulated in vesicles and
IR780 near-infrared dyes incorporated in the membranes. Distinct cell
membranes are investigated, red blood cell (RBC), melanoma (B16F10),
and glioblastoma (GL261). Hybrid nanocarriers containing synthetic lipids
and a cell membrane are designed. The biomedical applications of several
systems are compared. The inorganic nanoparticle consisted of Mn-ferrite
nanoparticles with a core diameter of 15 ± 4 nm. TEM images show many
multicore nanostructures (∼40 nm), which correlate with the hydrodynamic
size. Ultrahigh transverse relaxivity values are reported for the magnetic NPs, 746 mM−1s−1, decreasing respectively to 445 mM−1s−1
and 278 mM−1s−1 for the B16F10 and GL261 hybrid vesicles. The ratio of relaxivities r2/r1 decreased with the higher encapsulation
of NPs and increased for the biomimetic liposomes. Therapeutic temperatures are achieved by both, magnetic nanoparticle
hyperthermia and photothermal therapy. Photothermal conversion efficiency ∼25−30% are reported. Cell culture revealed lower
wrapping times for the biomimetic vesicles. In vivo experiments with distinct routes of nanoparticle administration were investigated.
Intratumoral injection proved the nanoparticle-mediated PTT efficiency. MRI and near-infrared images showed that the
nanoparticles accumulate in the tumor after intravenous or intraperitoneal administration. Both routes benefit from MRI-guided
PTT and demonstrate the multimodal theranostic applications for cancer therapy.
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ROCHA, João Victor Ribeiro et al. Near infrared biomimetic hybrid magnetic nanocarrier for MRI-guided thermal therapy. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, Washington, v. 17, n. 9, p. 13094-13110, 2025. DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c03434. Disponível em: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.4c03434. Acesso em: 20 ago. 2025.