Published in

American Chemical Society, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 49(135), p. 18621-18628, 2013

DOI: 10.1021/ja409490q

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Antiferromagnetic Iron Nanocolloids: A New Generation in Vivo T1 MRI Contrast Agent

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A novel T1 agent, antiferromagnetic α-iron oxide-hydroxide (α-FeOOH) nanocolloids with a diameter of 2-3 nm, has been successfully prepared. These nanocolloids, together with a post synthetic strategy performed in mesoporous silica, are a great improvement over the low T1-weighted contrast common in traditional magnetic silica nanocomposites. The intrinsic antiferromagnetic goethite (α-FeOOH) shows very low magnetization (Mz) of 0.05 emuˑg-1 at H = 2 T at 300 K (0.0006 emuˑg-1 for FeOOH/WMSN-PEG), which is two orders of magnitude smaller than any current ultrasmall iron oxide NPs (> 5 emuˑg-1) reported to date, hence ensuring the low r2 (∝ Mz) (7.64 mM-1s-1) and r2/r1 ratio (2.03) at 4.7 T. These biodegradable α-FeOOH nanocolloids also demonstrate excellent in vitro cellular imaging and in vivo MR vascular and urinary trace imaging capability with outstanding biocompatibility, which is exceptionally well secreted by the kidney, and not the liver as with most nanoparticles, opening up a new avenue for designing powerful antiferromagnetic iron T1 contrast agents.