4.7 Article

Gd-nanoparticles functionalization with specific peptides for β-amyloid plaques targeting

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-016-0212-y

Keywords

Beta-amyloid fibrils; MRI contrast agent; Gadolinium based nanoparticles; Amyloid imaging; Peptide-targeting; Alzheimer's disease

Funding

  1. Euronanomed ENMII JTC [2011-ERA-002-01- Dia-Amyl]
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR): ANR-12-RPIB Multimage
  3. ENMII JTC [2011-ERA-002-01]

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Background: Amyloidoses are characterized by the extracellular deposition of insoluble fibrillar proteinaceous aggregates highly organized into cross-beta structure and referred to as amyloid fibrils. Nowadays, the diagnosis of these diseases remains tedious and involves multiple examinations while an early and accurate protein typing is crucial for the patients' treatment. Routinely used neuroimaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) using Pittsburgh compound B, [C-11] PIB, provide structural information and allow to assess the amyloid burden, respectively, but cannot discriminate between different amyloid deposits. Therefore, the availability of efficient multimodal imaging nanoparticles targeting specific amyloid fibrils would provide a minimally-invasive imaging tool useful for amyloidoses typing and early diagnosis. In the present study, we have functionalized gadolinium-based MRI nanoparticles (AGuIX) with peptides highly specific for A beta amyloid fibrils, LPFFD and KLVFF. The capacity of such nanoparticles grafted with peptide to discriminate among different amyloid proteins, was tested with A beta(1-42) fibrils and with mutated-(V30M) transthyretin (TTR) fibrils. Results: The results of surface plasmon resonance studies showed that both functionalized nanoparticles interact with A beta(1-42) fibrils with equilibrium dissociation constant (K-d) values of 403 and 350 mu M respectively, whilst they did not interact with V30M-TTR fibrils. Similar experiments, performed with PIB, displayed an interaction both with A beta(1-42) fibrils and V30M-TTR fibrils, with K-d values of 6 and 10 mu M respectively, confirming this agent as a general amyloid fibril marker. Thereafter, the ability of functionalized nanoparticle to target and bind selectively A beta aggregates was further investigated by immunohistochemistry on AD like-neuropathology brain tissue. Pictures clearly indicated that KLVFF-grafted or LPFFD-grafted to AGuIX nanoparticle recognized and bound the A beta amyloid plaque localized in the mouse hippocampus. Conclusion: These results constitute a first step for considering these functionalized nanoparticles as a valuable multimodal imaging tool to selectively discriminate and diagnose amyloidoses.

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