Cellular fate and performance of group IV metal organic framework radioenhancers†
Abstract
Nano-sized metal organic frameworks (nanoMOFs) have gained increasing importance in biomedicine due to their tunable properties. In addition to their use as carriers in drug delivery, nanoMOFs containing hafnium have been successfully employed as radio-enhancers augmenting damage caused by X-ray irradiation in tumor tissue. While results are encouraging, there is little mechanistic understanding available, and the biological fate of these radio-enhancer nanoparticles remains largely unexplored. Here, we synthesized a selection of group IV metal-based (Hf, Ti, Ti/Zr) nanoMOFs and investigated their cell compatibility and radio-enhancement performance in direct comparison to the corresponding metal oxides. We report surprising radio-enhancement performance of Ti-containing nanoMOFs reaching dose modifying ratios of 3.84 in human sarcoma cells and no relevant dose modification in healthy human fibroblasts. These Ti-based nanoMOFs even outperformed previously reported Hf-based nanoMOFs as well as equimolar group IV metal oxides in direct benchmarking experiments. While group IV nanoMOFs were well-tolerated by cells in the absence of irradiation, the nanoMOFs partially dissolved in lysosomal buffer conditions showing distinctly different chemical stability compared to widely researched group IV oxides (TiO2, ZrO2, and HfO2). Taken together, this study illustrates the promising potential of Ti-based nanoMOFs for radio-enhancement and provides insight into the intracellular fate and stability of group IV nanoMOFs.