Doxorubicin-Loaded Ultrasmall Gold Nanoparticles (1.5 nm) for Brain Tumor Therapy and Assessment of Their Biodistribution

Benedikt Kruse, Banendu Sunder Dash, Kathrin Kostka, Natalie Wolff, Oleg Prymak, Kateryna Loza, Nina Gumbiowski, Marc Heggen, Cristiano Luis Pinto Oliveira*, Jyh Ping Chen*, Matthias Epple*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

Abstract

Ultrasmall gold nanoparticles (1.5 nm) were covalently conjugated with doxorubicin (AuDox) and AlexaFluor647 (AuAF647) to assess their biodistribution and their efficiency toward brain tumors (glioblastoma). A thorough characterization by transmission electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, and differential centrifugal sedimentation confirmed their uniform ultrasmall nature which makes them very mobile in the body. Each nanoparticle carried either 13 doxorubicin molecules (AuDox) or 2.7 AlexaFluor-647 molecules (AuAF647). The firm attachment of the ligands to the nanoparticles was demonstrated by their resilience to extensive washing, followed by centrifugation. The particles easily entered mammalian cells (HeLa, T98-G, brain endothelial cells, and human astrocytes) due to their small size. The intravenously delivered fluorescing AuAF647 nanoparticles crossed the blood-brain barrier with ∼23% accumulation in the brain tumor in an orthotopic U87 brain tumor model in nude mice. This was confirmed by elemental analysis (gold; inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy) in various organs. The doxorubicin-loaded AuDox nanoparticles inhibited brain tumor growth and prolonged animal survival without adverse side effects. Most of the nanoparticles (84%) had been excreted from the animal after 24 h, indicating a high mobility in the body.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6890-6907
Number of pages18
JournalACS Applied Bio Materials
Volume7
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 10 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.

Keywords

  • biodistribution
  • doxorubicin
  • glioblastoma
  • gold
  • in vivo
  • nanoparticles

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