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16/03/2020

Nanocapsules “3-in-1” for in vivo biomedical imaging

icmab_884

16/03/2020

Researchers synthesized drug delivery nanocapsules with three contrast agents for biomedical imaging techniques to study their biodistribution.

Nanomedicine is largely focused on the design of nanosystems as diagnostic and therapeutic tools (teragnosis), i.e. on the design of nanomaterials for the identification of pathologies using biomedical imaging techniques, and for the control release of therapeutic agents for its treatment.The Neurovascular Diseases research group from the Vall d'Hebron Research Institute (VHIR) and the Institute of Materials Science of Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC), in collaboration with CICbiomaGUNE (Basque Country) and the University of Artois ( France), have developed nanocapsules that can be administered intravenously and their biodistribution in vivo can be visualized using three different medical imaging techniques. The study has been published in https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2020/NR/C9NR10620K#!divAbstract" Nanoscale.Nanocapsules are used for drug delivery of insoluble, highly sensitive, or multi-components drugs. Nanocapsules also protect the encapsulated drug from degradation, inactivation or clearance, and reduce its toxicity, if it is the case. Furthermore, nanocapsules allow the functionalization or modification of its surface, so contrast agents for biomedical imaging can be chemically attached, as is the case in this study.The biomedical imaging techniques used in this study include magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), fluorescence (blue and near-infrared) and positron emission tomography (PET). All three are non-invasive diagnostic by imaging and experimental research tools that allow to visualize where the nanocapsules are in the organisms in real time.Using more than one contrast agent to study the in vivo biodistribution of a nanodrug provides additional information, since the three imaging techniques have different sensitivity and resolution limits, and can be used at different levels of drug development, or to detect biodistribution in different tissues of the human body.The nanocapsules are made of a biodegradable and biocompatible biopolymer, PLGA (poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid)), approved by the FDA (United States Food and Drug Administration). The study confirms that they are safe both in vivo and in vitro.Furthermore, the particularity of the nanocapsules synthesized in this study is that they have been functionalized in a modular way, since the three imaging probes can be added and removed separately or simultaneously. "This fact allows that in each nanodrug development, a different imaging technique can be used to validate the results", explains Anna Roig, researcher who leads the study at the ICMAB.These contrast agents are used in all three biomedical imaging techniques, maintaining the size and shape of the nanocapsules, and without cross interference with the others or with the drug encapsulated inside the nanocapsule."A great challenge in nanomedicine is how to make a local non-invasive administration of nanomaterials with a controlled release of the therapeutic agent, especially in difficult-access tissues, such as the brain. Thus, having new biocompatible formulations that allow in vivo neuroimaging monitoring are necessary in pre-clinical research phases to assess the development of specific treatments", explains Anna Rosell, researcher who leads the study at VHIR."To succeed in translating nanomaterials prepared in the laboratory into clinical trials, we must synthesize nanomaterials as simply as possible for their final application. This is why the modular strategy we are presenting is interesting, in which neither the morphology nor the size of the nanocapsule is modified by adding or removing contrast agents", says Anna Roig.The study is led by Anna Rosell, Head of the Research Group on Neurovascular Diseases at VHIR, and Anna Roig, Research Professor at ICMAB-CSIC in the Group of Nanoparticles and Nanocomposites. The two researchers participate in the European project MAGBBRIS devoted to "New magnetic biomaterials for brain repair and biomedical imaging after stroke" (coordinated by Rosell). This study, now published in the journal Nanoscale, is part of this project, and is the first step before testing the efficiency of nanocapsules in repair therapies after stroke.

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