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  4. Water-Soluble Gadofullerenes: Toward High-Relaxivity, pH-Responsive MRI Contrast Agents
 
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research article

Water-Soluble Gadofullerenes: Toward High-Relaxivity, pH-Responsive MRI Contrast Agents

Tóth, Éva
•
Bolskar, Robert D.
•
Borel, Alain  
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2005
Journal of the American Chemical Society

The water-soluble endohedral gadofullerene derivatives, Gd@C60(OH)x and Gd@C60[C(COOH)2]10, have been characterized with regard to their MRI contrast agent properties. Water-proton relaxivities have been measured in aqueous solution at variable temperature (278-335 K), and for the first time for gadofullerenes, relaxivities as a function of magnetic field (5 × 10-4 to 9.4 T; NMRD profiles) are also reported. Both compounds show relaxivity maxima at high magnetic fields (30-60 MHz) with a maximum relaxivity of 10.4 mM-1 s-1 for Gd@C60[C(COOH)2]10 and 38.5 mM-1 s-1 for Gd@C60(OH)x at 299 K. Variable-temperature, transverse and longitudinal 17O relaxation rates, and chemical shifts have been measured at three magnetic fields (B = 1.41, 4.7, and 9.4 T), and the results point exclusively to an outer sphere relaxation mechanism. The NMRD profiles have been analyzed in terms of slow rotational motion with a long rotational correlation time calculated to be R298 = 2.6 ns. The proton exchange rate obtained for Gd@C60[C(COOH)2]10 is kex298 = 1.4 × 107 s-1 which is consistent with the exchange rate previously determined for malonic acid. The proton relaxivities for both gadofullerene derivatives increase strongly with decreasing pH (pH: 3-12). This behavior results from a pH-dependent aggregation of Gd@C60(OH)x and Gd@C60[C(COOH)2]10, which has been characterized by dynamic light scattering measurements. The pH dependency of the proton relaxivities makes these gadofullerene derivatives prime candidates for pH-responsive MRI contrast agent applications.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/ja044688h
Web of Science ID

WOS:000226324500064

Author(s)
Tóth, Éva
•
Bolskar, Robert D.
•
Borel, Alain  
•
González, Gabriel
•
Helm, Lothar  
•
Merbach, André E.  
•
Sitharaman, Balaji
•
Wilson, Lon J.
Date Issued

2005

Published in
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume

127

Issue

2

Start page

799

End page

805

Subjects

fullerenes

•

magnetic resonance imaging

•

contrast agents

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCIB  
Available on Infoscience
August 11, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/232833
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