Claire Wilhelm (Matière & systèmes complexes, Paris-Diderot) : annulé

12 mai 2014 11:15 » 12:15 — Bibliothèque PCT - F3.04

Magnetic nanoparticles as cellular labels : cell imaging, tissue engineering, fate and intercellular transfer.

Cell therapies and medically oriented nanotechnologies are currently among promising biotechnologies. One promising approach is to associate magnetic nanoparticles with cells in order to supply them with sufficient magnetization to be detectable by MRI, manipulated by magnetic forces, or treated with therapeutic hyperthermia. A decade ago, we proposed the use of anionic iron oxide nanoparticles as efficient agents for cell internalisation without impacting cell functions. Recently we examined the influence of the amount of internalized iron and the state of nanoparticle aggregation on the capacity for mesenchymal stem cell differentiation and MRI single cell tracking. We demonstrated that high resolution Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) allowed combining cellular-scale resolution with the ability to detect two cell types simultaneously at any tissue depth. In parallel, we adressed the challenge to create a functional tissue from stem cells in vitro. The aim is to confine stem cells in three dimensions at the millimetric scale by using home-designed miniaturized magnetic devices, in order to create cellular patterns for stem cell differentiation and tissue engineering. Finally, we investigated the issue of the becoming of the nanoparticles after their internalization, and evidenced some release within microvesicles. These biogenic vesicles could be engineered to attain multiple responsiveness, and provide them with therapeutic and imaging functions.

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