key: cord-0028368-o29fr56u authors: Rocchi, Paul; Labied, Lucie; Doussineau, Tristan; Julien, Michel; Giroud, Barbara; Vulliet, Emmanuelle; Randon, Jérôme; Tillement, Olivier; Hagège, Agnès; Lux, François title: Identification of Molecular Fragments in Equilibrium with Polysiloxane Ultrasmall Nanoparticles date: 2022-02-22 journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) DOI: 10.3390/nano12050738 sha: 8c5557c431ae0dda8489d1b35ae9faea85a7edbb doc_id: 28368 cord_uid: o29fr56u During recent decades, ultrasmall inorganic nanoparticles have attracted considerable interest due to their favorable biodistribution, pharmacokinetics and theranostic properties. In particular, AGuIX nanoparticles made of polysiloxane and gadolinium chelates were successfully translated to the clinics. In an aqueous medium, these nanoparticles are in dynamic equilibrium with polysiloxane fragments due to the hydrolysis of Si–O–Si bonds. Thanks to high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, all these fragments were separated and identified. Due to their capacity to integrate different functionalities, nanoparticles have attracted considerable interest for biomedical applications, in particular for theranostic ones (a combination of diagnostic and therapeutic), a concept introduced by Funkhouser in 1998 [1, 2] . In oncology, nanoparticles are of particular interest since they can be passively accumulated in tumors after intravenous administration through the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect [3] . However, despite intense preclinical research [4, 5] and important funding during the last few decades, only a limited number of nanoparticles have reached clinical trials and even less to the market [6, 7] . Several explanations can be given to explain this gap: (i) difficulty to scale-up the production and lack of process robustness; (ii) lack of detailed product physicochemical characterization to convince regulatory offices on these new types of pharmaceutical products; (iii) unexpected toxicity; (iv) detrimental discrepancies between promising preclinical results and clinical ones; or (v) long, uncertain, and expensive clinical development leading to a high risk of failure before commercialization [8] [9] [10] . Nanoparticle-based pharmaceuticals are complex products for which regulatory guidelines are still not properly defined. Nanomedicines require the implementation and the development of new and specific analytical techniques and methods that have many hurdles in the regulatory pathway up to their approval. Among nanoparticles, ultrasmall inorganic nanoparticles (with a hydrodynamic diameter of <10 nm) were specifically developed thanks to their unique advantages [11, 12] . Indeed, they can combine the benefits of including metals displaying interesting properties (such as magnetic properties for magnetic resonance imaging or high Z for radiosensitization) and fast renal elimination avoiding long-term retention of metals in the body, often associated with toxicity. In addition, even if their resident time in the blood circulation is lesser than for larger nanoparticles, better tumoral penetration can be achieved [3] . Due to these interesting features, two ultrasmall nanoparticles were accepted in clinical trials during the last decade: (i) Cornell dots made of silica core embedding an optical imaging agent and displaying PEG functions, 124 I agent and cRGD [13] , and (ii) AGuIX made of a polysiloxane (silica derivative) matrix onto which macrocyclic gadolinium chelates (DOTAGA(Gd)) are covalently grafted (See Figure 1A ,B) [14] . A phase 1b clinical trial on the treatment of brain metastases by whole-brain radiation therapy using AGuIX as a radiosensitizer (NanoRad) was recently completed demonstrating the very good safety profile of the product, as well as first hints at efficacy [15, 16] . Based on these encouraging results, AGuIX is now in phase 2 clinical trials for this indication and for others, such as lung and pancreatic cancers. Due to their high surface-to-volume ratio, ultrasmall silica-based nanoparticles are more susceptible to be biodegraded [17] . The degradation mechanism can be described by a dissolution of the silica-based matrix through the hydrolysis of Si-O-Si bonds over time and yielding (poly)silicic acid and silanols molecules that are finally fragments of the product. This kind of biodegradation has already been shown on AGuIX nanoparticles using high liquid performance chromatography (HPLC) coupled to electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) [18] or Taylor dispersion analysis (TDA) coupled to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) but these methods were not capable of providing clear identification for all molecular fragments in equilibrium [19] . In these studies, assessment of biodegradability was mainly performed by monitoring the size of the nanoparticle over time and molecular fragments were proposed after almost complete hydrolysis of the polysiloxane matrix. Due to hydrolysis reactions, polysiloxane nanoparticles are always in equilibrium with molecular fragments in an aqueous medium. The aim of this paper is to clearly identify the exact nature of these fragments for the AGuIX nanoparticles at a relevant concentration for in vivo applications. Acetonitrile (CH 3 CN, ACN, >99.9%) was purchased from Sigma Aldrich (Saint-Quentin-Fallavier, France). Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) and Formic acid (AF) at LC/MS grade purity were purchased from Fischer Scientific (Waltham, MA, USA). The starting USNPs AGuIX (gadolinium-chelated polysiloxane nanoparticles) were provided by NH TherAguix (Meylan, France) as lyophilized powder and reconstituted in ultrapure water. Only Milli-Q water (ρ > 18 MΩ·cm) was used for the aqueous solution preparation. HPLC-UV/Vis system: A Shimadzu Prominence series UFLC system with a CBM-20A controller bus module, an LC-20 AD liquid chromatograph, a CTO-20A column oven and an SPD-20A UV-visible detector. UV-visible absorption was measured at 295 nm. HPLC-ICP/MS system: A Nexion 2000B (Perkin-Elmer, Villebon Sur Yvette, France), coupled with a Flexar LC system (Perkin-Elmer). Gd signal was monitored at m/z 152. Syngistix software version 2.3 was used to control the ICP-MS. The Gd signal was acquired through Empower software version 7.3. HPLC-ESI/MS system: The ESI/MS measurements were carried out on a triple quadrupole spectrometer Xevo TQ-S (Waters, Milford, MA, USA), coupled with UHPLC chain Acquity H-Class (Waters). The analyses were performed on positive mode (ESI+) and detection SCAN mode set on 300-1500 uma range. The measure of gadolinium and silicium content in the AGuIX product was conducted by the company Quality Assistance (Thuin, Belgium). The measurements were performed through ICP-MS Agilent 7900 equipped with Masshunter software. The measure of carbon and nitrogen content was conducted by the Isotope and Organic Laboratory of Institut des Sciences Analytiques (ISA, Lyon, France) through device designed by the laboratory. For the carbon analysis, total combustion of the AGuIX at 1050 • C under a stream of oxygen is performed. The carbon in the sample is transformed into carbon dioxide then quantified by specific infrared CO 2 detectors. For the nitrogen, total combustion of AGuIX sample at 1050 • C is performed under a stream of helium and oxygen. The nitrogen in AGuIX is transformed into various nitrogen oxides reduced to molecular nitrogen. Carbon dioxide and water from combustion are trapped on ascarite and magnesium perchlorate. Nitrogen is quantified by a thermal conductivity detector. The AGuIX sample composition was studied through HPLC using conditions described in C. Truillet et al. [16] The separation was performed using C4 reverse phase column (Jupiter ® , 5 µm, 300 Å, 150 × 4.6 mm) at constant flow rate of 1 mL·min −1 . The gradient initial mobile phase was 95% solvent A-5% solvent B (A = H 2 O/ACN/TFA: 98.9/1/0.1 v/v/v, B = ACN/H 2 O/TFA: 89.9/10/0.1 v/v/v) and was held for 5 min. After this isocratic step, nanoparticles were eluted by a gradient developed from 5% to 90% of solvent B in solvent A over 15 min. The concentration of solvent B was maintained over 5 min. The sample was analyzed using both UV-Vis detection and ICP-MS detection. For the ICP-MS analysis, O 2 was added to the gas injection mixture in order to facilitate complete combustion of the increasing amount of ACN in the plasma source. Moreover, after the elution of the nanoparticle peak, the LC route was switched to the waste to avoid excess ACN entering the ICP. Operating conditions used for this analysis by ICP-MS were: nebulizer gas flow rate, 0.77 L/min; O 2 AMS Gas flow, 0.07 L.min −1 ; plasma gas flow rate, 15 L.min −1 ; auxiliary gas flow rate, 1.2 L.min −1 ; radiofrequency power, 1600 W for the plasma. All other parameters were tuned to maximize the Gd signal at m/z = 152. The fragment separation was achieved by HPLC using C4 reverse phase column (Jupiter ® , 5 µm, 300 Å, 150 × 2 mm). The measurements were performed on isocratic mode using the following phase composition H 2 O/ACN/AF (98.9%/1%/0.1%) at 0.2 mL·min −1 flow rate. After each nanoparticle injection, the column was flushed with H 2 O/ACN/AF (19.9/80/0.1 v/v/v) solution for 10 min, to elute the nanoparticles. The fragments were analyzed using the three different detectors. The operating condition used for the ICP-MS system were: nebulizer gas flow rate, 0.84 L·min −1 ; plasma gas flow rate, 15 L·min −1 ; auxiliary gas flow rate, 1.2 L·min −1 ; radiofrequency power, 1600 W for the plasma. The operating conditions used for the ESI/MS system were: capillary tension, 3.2 kV; source temperature, 150 • C; desolvation temperature, 550 • C; N 2 desolvation gas flow, 900 L·h −1 ; N 2 nebulizing gas flow, 150 L·h −1 . The identification and the drawing of each fragment were assisted by the use of the Mar-vinSketch software (ChemAxon, https://www.chemaxon.com, accessed on 16 February 2022). The representative AGuIX ® batch studied in this article was prepared through a fivestep process consisting of three chemical transformation steps, a purification step and a lyophilization step: (i) formation of a gadolinium oxide core by addition of sodium hydroxide on gadolinium chloride in diethylene glycol (DEG); (ii) growth of a polysiloxane shell by addition of a mixture of TEOS (tetraethoxysilane) and APTES (aminopropyltriethoxysilane); (iii) functionalization of the amino functions issued from APTES by DOTAGA anhydride (2,2 ,2"-(10-(2,6-dioxotetrahydro-2H-pyran-3-yl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7-triyl)triacetic acid); (iv) after precipitation in acetone and transfer to water, the nanoparticles are purified through tangential flow filtration during which a top-down process occurs consisting of dissolution of the gadolinium oxide cores due to chelation of gadolinium by DOTAGA followed by fragmentation of polysiloxane shells, rearrangement of these fragments and chelation of released gadolinium by DOTAGA (see Supporting Information Figure S1 ) [20, 21] . Tangential flow filtration using membranes of NMWCO of 5kDa aims at removing small molecules comprising salts, residual solvents, any residual molecular species and the smallest polysiloxane species. They are finally freeze-dried for easy handling. After dispersion in water, the nanoparticles display a hydrodynamic diameter of 2.7 nm (see Supporting Information Figure S2) , and almost all of the DOTAGA chelate a gadolinium ion (~1-2% of free chelates) (see Supporting Information Figure S3 ). Despite a high purification factor applied by tangential flow filtration, fragments issued from the polysiloxane matrix are always detected by HPLC due to the equilibrium between them and the nanoparticles after hydrolysis of the Si-O-Si bonds (see Figure 1C. ). Fragments are detected between 2 and 4 min and nanoparticles between 9 and 14 min on a C4 reverse-phase column using both UV/VIS and ICP-MS detectors. The HPLC conditions have further been modified to match with the ESI-MS detector requirements. Consequently, the flow rate was lowered by reducing the reverse phase column diameter from 4.6 mm to 2 mm, and TFA was replaced by AF in the HPLC phases to enhance the ESI-MS signal of the fragments. Those conditions were applied to study the separation of the different fragments using three different types of detection (i.e., ICP/MS, ESI/MS and UV). ESI/MS detection permits us to distinguish seven peaks while ICP/MS and UV detection at 295 nm are limited to four or five peaks. This discrepancy led us to consider that the two first peaks are associated with polysiloxane fragments that do not contain either gadolinium (detected by ICP/MS) or DOTAGA (detected by UV detection at 295 nm) (Figure 2 ). As previously performed by Hu et al. for carbon nanoparticles [22] , the different peaks separated by HPLC were fully studied by ESI/MS (see Figure 3 ) and the identification of the fragments was proposed in Table 1 using notable gadolinium isotopic patterns and water hydration to determine the charge states of the compounds. As stated previously, thanks to ICP-MS and UV detections, the two first peaks are fragments issued from polysiloxane without DOTAGA(Gd) sub-structures. For the first HPLC peak, three co-eluted components were identified (see Supporting Information Figure S4 ). For each, the mass is obtained involving a methanoate anion present in the eluent. The m/z signal at 303.0 (z = 1) is related to a fragment corresponding to two silicon atoms issued from APTES. A signal corresponding to an m/z of 423.0 is associated with four silicon atoms coming from APTES for two of them and TEOS for the two others. Interestingly, the signal at an m/z of 441.1 corresponds to the same species with the hydrolysis of one Si-O-Si bond. For the less defined HPLC peak 2 (see Supporting Information Figure S5 For the second one, a composition of one DOTAGA(Gd) and five silicon atoms issued from three TEOS and two APTES is obtained. Hydrolysis of one Si-O-Si bond leads to m/z of 545.6 for z = 2 and 364.0 for z = 3. For HPLC peak 6 also, the main species corresponds to two DOTAGA(Gd) and twenty silicon atoms issued from nine APTES and eleven TEOS (see Supporting Information Figure S8 ). As for HPLC peak 5, cleaving hydrolysis of a Si-O-Si bond occurs in the ESI-MS source and leads to two different species with different charge states. The first one corresponds to one DOTAGA(Gd) associated with nine silicon atoms issued from four APTES and five TEOS and is observed at an m/z of 367.3 for z = 4 and of 733.6 for z = 2. By hydrolysis or condensation, the species at an m/z of 724.6, 742.6, 751.6 or 760.6 can be obtained (see Figure 5 ). The second one corresponds to one DOTAGA(Gd) associated with eleven silicon atoms issued from five APTES and six TEOS and corresponds to masses of 425.5 (z = 4) and 850.1 (z = 2). Finally, HPLC peak 7 is attributed to DOTAGA(Gd) without polysiloxane fragments (see Supporting Information Figure S9 ). This was verified by an LC-ESI-MS analysis of a control sample of DOTAGA(Gd) (see Supporting Information Figure S10) . Altogether, these results show the biodegradability of the nanoparticle and its equilibrium with smaller fragments issued from the cleaving hydrolysis of Si-O-Si functions. It has already been shown that a large part of these fragments is eliminated very rapidly, as fragments under 8 kDa are mainly observed five minutes after intravenous administration in rats, and their concentration decreases a lot after this timepoint [23] . One of the limitations of the study is the use of an aqueous medium that cannot completely mimic the more complex interactions that may arrive in a biological medium but a precedent biodegradation study performed in phosphate buffer and serum has shown a very similar electrophoretic profile for the molecular fragments in both media [19] . Moreover, AGuIX presents very limited interactions with proteins, such as human serum albumin [24] , confirmed by their very fast renal elimination [15, 16] . Altogether, these results indicate that the fragments identified in this study will certainly also be representative of the biological medium. Full identification of silanol molecular species issued from AGuIX partial dissolution in an aqueous medium was performed. These molecular species are fragments of the ultrasmall AGuIX nanoparticle that are in dynamic equilibrium with the nanoparticles at a given concentration. They display from one to two DOTAGA (Gd) entities. These fragments are of no safety concern due to their silane composition and also their rapid elimination through the kidneys [23] . The approach developed in this study can be applied to different ultrasmall nanoparticles that will certainly be mainly developed in the future due to their interesting pharmacokinetic features. Supplementary Materials: The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https: //www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/nano12050738/s1, Figure S1 : Synthesis route of AGuIX; Figure S2 : AGuIX main characterizations; Figure S3 : Quantification of uncomplexed DOTAGA; Figure S4 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 1; Figure S5 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 2; Figure S6 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 3; Figure S7 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 4; Figure S8 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 6; Figure S9 : Chemical structures of the fragments identified at HPLC peak 7; Figure Nanomaterials for theranostics: Recent advances and future challenges Preclinical Cancer Theranostics-From Nanomaterials to Clinic: The Missing Link EPR-mediated tumor targeting using ultrasmall-hybrid nanoparticles: From animal to human with theranostic AGuIX nanoparticles Self-Assembled Nanomaterials for Enhanced Phototherapy of Cancer Tumor microenvironment-specific functional nanomaterials for biomedical applications Inorganic nanoparticles in clinical trials and translations Nanoparticles in the clinic: An update post COVID-19 vaccines Nanopharmaceuticals and nanomedicines currently on the market: Challenges and opportunities Challenges associated and approaches for successful translation of nanomedicines into commercial products Nanomaterial drug products: Manufacturing and analytical perspectives Ultrasmall-in-nano approach: Enabling the translation of metal nanomaterials to clinics Ultrasmall inorganic nanoparticles: State-of-the-art and perspectives for biomedical applications Cancertargeting ultrasmall silica nanoparticles for clinical translation: Physicochemical structure and biological property correlations AGuIX ® from bench to bedside-Transfer of an ultrasmall theranostic gadolinium-based nanoparticle to clinical medicine Targeting brain metastases with ultrasmall theranostic nanoparticles, a first-in-human trial from an MRI perspective Theranostic AGuIX nanoparticles as radiosensitizer: A phase I, dose-escalation study in patients with multiple brain metastases (NANO-RAD trial) Degradability and Clearance of Silicon, Organosilica, Silsesquioxane, Silica Mixed Oxide, and Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles Coupling of HPLC with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry for studying the aging of ultrasmall multifunctional gadolinium-based silica nanoparticles Biodegradation of metal-based ultra-small nanoparticles: A combined approach using TDA-ICP-MS and CE-ICP-MS Advantages of gadolinium based ultrasmall nanoparticles vs molecular gadolinium chelates for radiotherapy guided by MRI for glioma treatment A Top-Down synthesis route to ultrasmall multifunctional Gd-Based silica nanoparticles for theranostic applications Elucidating the structure of carbon nanoparticles by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionisation quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry Long-Term in Vivo Clearance of Gadolinium-Based AGuIX Nanoparticles and Their Biocompatibility after Systemic Injection Human serum albumin in the presence of AGuIX nanoagents: Structure stabilisation without direct interaction