Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering, Vol.126, No.1, 119-125, 2018
In vivo tissue distribution and safety of polyacrylic acid-modified titanium peroxide nanoparticles as novel radiosensitizers
Polyacrylic acid (PAA)-modified titanium peroxide nanoparticles (PAA-TiOx NPs) are promising radiosensitizers. PAA-TiOx NPs were synthesized from commercial TiO2 nanoparticles that were modified with PAA and functionalized by H2O2 treatment. To realize practical clinical uses for PAA-TiOx NPs, their tissue distribution and acute toxicity were evaluated using healthy mice and mice bearing tumors derived from xenografted MIAPaCa-2 human pancreatic cancer cells. Healthy mice were injected with PAA-TiOx NPs at 25 mg/kg body weight via the tail vein, and tumor-bearing mice were injected either into the tumor locally or via the tail vein. The concentration of PAA-TiOx NPs in major organs was determined over time using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry. After 1 h, 12% of the PAA-TiOx NP dose had accumulated in the tumor, and 2.8% of the dose remained after 1 week. Such high accumulation could be associated with enhanced permeability and retention effects of the tumor, as PAA-TiOx NPs are composed of inorganic particles and polymers, without tumor-targeting molecules. The liver accumulated the largest proportion of the injected nanoparticles, up to 42% in tumor-bearing mice. Blood biochemical parameters were also investigated after intravenous injection of PAA-TiOx NPs in healthy mice. PAA-TiOx NPs invoked a slight change in various liver-related biochemical parameters, but no liver injury was observed over the practical dose range. In the future, PAA-TiOx NPs should be modified to prevent accumulation in the liver and minimize risk to patients. (C) 2018, The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Titanium peroxide;Titanium dioxide;Nanoparticle;Radiosensitizer;Tissue distribution;Acute toxicity;Enhanced permeability and retention effect;Cancer