Open Access Research

Hybrid gold-iron oxide nanoparticles as a multifunctional platform for biomedical application

Clare Hoskins1, Yue Min1, Mariana Gueorguieva1, Craig McDougall2, Alexander Volovick1, Paul Prentice1, Zhigang Wang1, Andreas Melzer1, Alfred Cuschieri1 and Lijun Wang1*

Author Affiliations

1 Institute for Medical Science and Technology (IMSaT), University of Dundee, Wilson House, 1 Wurzburg Loan, Dundee, DD2 1FD, UK

2 Division of Electronic Engineering and Physics, University of Dundee, Nethergate, Dundee, DD1 4HN, UK

For all author emails, please log on.

Journal of Nanobiotechnology 2012, 10:27 doi:10.1186/1477-3155-10-27

Published: 25 June 2012

Abstract

Background

Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) have increasing applications in biomedicine, however fears over long term stability of polymer coated particles have arisen. Gold coating IONPs results in particles of increased stability and robustness. The unique properties of both the iron oxide (magnetic) and gold (surface plasmon resonance) result in a multimodal platform for use as MRI contrast agents and as a nano-heater.

Results

Here we synthesize IONPs of core diameter 30 nm and gold coat using the seeding method with a poly(ethylenimine) intermediate layer. The final particles were coated in poly(ethylene glycol) to ensure biocompatibility and increase retention times in vivo. The particle coating was monitored using FTIR, PCS, UV–vis absorption, TEM, and EDX. The particles appeared to have little cytotoxic effect when incubated with A375M cells. The resultant hybrid nanoparticles (HNPs) possessed a maximal absorbance at 600 nm. After laser irradiation in agar phantom a ΔT of 32°C was achieved after only 90 s exposure (50 μgmL-1). The HNPs appeared to decrease T2 values in line with previously clinically used MRI contrast agent Feridex®.

Conclusions

The data highlights the potential of these HNPs as dual function MRI contrast agents and nano-heaters for therapies such as cellular hyperthermia or thermo-responsive drug delivery.

Keywords:
Magnetic nanoparticles; Gold nano-shells; Magnetic resonance imaging; Surface plasmon resonance; Multifunctional nanoparticles