The Electrostatic Confinement of Aquated Monocationic Gd(III) Complex-molecules Within the Inner Core of Porous Silica Nanoparticles Creates a Highly Efficient Contrast Agent for Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Overview
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Contrast-agent enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been under continuous investigation for the conspicuous imaging of lesions and the early-stage detection of tumors. To achieve the development of a -weighted contrast agent with a high relaxivity value, herein, porous silica nanoparticles that had internalized about 20 aquated cationic Gd(III) complexes (1) of the hexadentate hydroxyethyl-appended picolinate-based ligand Hhbda were demonstrated. Complex 1 exhibited a longitudinal relaxivity value per mM Gd(III) ions, , of 9.05 mM s (pH 7.4, 37 °C, 1.41 T), which increased to 86.41 mM s because of the grafting of complex 1 in the inner core of porous silica nanospheres through electrostatic interactions between the anionic silica surface and the cationic complex 1 molecules. A further augmentation in the relaxivity value to 118.32 mM s was realized because of the interaction of the complex 1@SiONPs with serum albumin protein. The synthesized nanosystem was impervious to physiologically available anions (HPO and HCO) and also kinetically inert, as evidenced a transmetallation experiment in the presence of Zn(II) ions. The developed complex-incorporated nanomaterial was bio- and hemo-compatible. Cellular uptake measurements employing HeLa cells and the concentration-dependent enhancement in the brightness of phantom images, recorded under a clinical scanner at 1.5 T, demonstrated that the developed biocompatible 1@SiONP complex has promising diagnostic applications as a -weighted MRI contrast agent.