Presentation + Paper
21 August 2015 Evaluating mononuclear cells as nanoparticle delivery vehicles for the treatment of breast tumors
Jaclyn K. Murton, Chelin Hu, Mona M. Ahmed, Helen J. Hathaway, Monique Nysus, Tamara Anderson Daniels, Jeffrey P. Norenberg, Natalie L. Adolphi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In breast cancer, certain types of circulating immune cells respond to long-range chemical signals from tumors by leaving the blood stream to actively infiltrate tumor tissue. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether immune cells could be used to deliver therapeutic nanoparticles into breast tumors in mice. Mononuclear splenocytes (MS) were harvested from donor mice, labeled with Indium-111, injected intravenously into immune-competent recipient mice (3 tumor-bearing and 3 control), and imaged longitudinally by SPECT/CT. For comparison, the biodistribution of bonemarrow derived macrophages (BMDM) in one pair of mice was also imaged. Quantitative analysis of the SPECT images demonstrates that, after 24 hours, the concentration of MS detected in mammary tumors is more than 3-fold higher than the concentration detected in normal mammary glands. The ratio of MS concentration in mammary tissue to MS concentration in non-target tissues (muscle, lung, heart, liver, spleen, and kidney) was enhanced in tumor-bearing mice (compared to controls), with statistical significance achieved for mammary/muscle (p<0.01), mammary/lung (p<0.05), and mammary/kidney (p<0.05). By contrast, BMDM did not show a different affinity for tumors relative to normal mammary tissue. MS were incubated with 100 nm red fluorescent nanoparticles, and flow cytometry demonstrated that ~35% of the MS population exhibited strong phagocytic uptake of the nanoparticles. After intravenous injection into tumor-bearing mice, fluorescence microscopy images of tumor sections show qualitatively that nanoparticle-loaded MS retain the ability to infiltrate mammary tumors. Taken together, these results suggest that MS carriers are capable of actively targeting therapeutic nanoparticles to breast tumors.
Conference Presentation
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jaclyn K. Murton, Chelin Hu, Mona M. Ahmed, Helen J. Hathaway, Monique Nysus, Tamara Anderson Daniels, Jeffrey P. Norenberg, and Natalie L. Adolphi "Evaluating mononuclear cells as nanoparticle delivery vehicles for the treatment of breast tumors", Proc. SPIE 9550, Biosensing and Nanomedicine VIII, 95500I (21 August 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2188334
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KEYWORDS
Tumors

Tissues

Nanoparticles

Breast

Spleen

Bone

Lung

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