10:30 |
206. |
A Multimodality
Investigation of the Dynamics, Trafficking and Properties of
Iron Oxide Core High-Density Lipoprotein in Experimental
Atherosclerosis
Torjus Skajaa1,2, David
Peter Cormode1, Peter Jarzyna1,
Courtney Blachford3, Amanda Delshad1,
Edward A. Fisher3, Ronald E. Gordon4,
Zahi A. Fayad1, Willem J. M. Mulder1
1Translational and
Molecular Imaging Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
New York, NY, United States; 2Dept. of
Cardiology, Clinical Institute, Aarhus University Hospital (Skejby),
Aarhus, Denmark; 3School of Medicine,
New York University, New York, NY, United States; 4Department
of Pathology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States
FeO-HDL is a lipoprotein derived nanoparticle platform
detectable by MRI, optical imaging and TEM. In the current
study FeO-HDL was synthesized, applied to various cell lines
in vitro and to apoE-KO and wild type mice in vivo.
Characterization of FeO-HDL revealed close resemblance to
native HDL. In vitro experiments confirmed the
aforementioned and showed excellent biocompatibility. Upon
intravenous administration in vivo MRI experiments on
apoE-KO mice revealed their uptake in the lesioned vessel
wall, which was confirmed histologically. Lipid exchange
measurements showed lipid transfer from FeO-HDL to native
lipoproteins. Conclusively we have shown that FeO-HDl
closely resembles native HDL. |
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10:42 |
207. |
The Effects of
Iron Oxide Labelling on the in Vitro Chondrogenic
Potential of Three Human Cell Types
Sushmita Saha1, Steven
Frederick Tanner2, Jennifer Kirkham1,
David Wood1, Stephen Curran3, Xuebin
B. Yang1
1Department of Oral
Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, W-Yorkshire, United
Kingdom; 2Division of Medical Physics, University
of Leeds, Leeds, W-Yorkshire, United Kingdom; 3Smith
and Nephew Research Centre, York, United Kingdom
MRI
has been used to monitor the distribution of labelled cells
in studies related to cell therapy in regenerative
medicine. There has been debate on the effects of the
Super-Paramagnetic Iron Oxide (SPIO) label on cellular
differentiation along the chondrogenic lineage. Whilst
previous studies have employed tissue staining to infer
cartilage formation; here we use the quantitative reverse
transcription polymerase chain reaction technique to assess
the effects of the SPIO label on chondrogenic gene
expression. The study has shown that inhibition of gene
expression resulting from SPIO labelling is dependent on the
target cell used. |
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10:54 |
208. |
Non-Invasive
Monitoring of Human Dendritic Cell Migration in the CB17
Scid Mouse by Cellular MRI
Gregory A. Dekaban1,
Xizhong Zhang2, Vasiliki Economopoulos3,
Jennifer Noad3, Roja Rohani3, Adele
Wang4, Megan Levings4, Ronan Foley5,
Paula Foster3
1BioTherapeutics
Research Laboratory, Robarts Research Institute, London ,
Ontario, Canada; 2BioTherapeutics Research
Laboratory, Robarts Research Institute, London, Ontario,
Canada; 3Imaging Research Laboratories, Robarts
Research Institute; 4Department of Surgery,
University of British Columbia; 5Department of
Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University
The
successful migration of adequate numbers of in
vitro-generated human dendritic cells (DC) from the site of
injection to a draining lymph node is a necessary and
crucial step in order for a DC-based vaccine to be a
successful immunotherapy for cancer and infectious disease.
Currently, less than 5% of injected DC migrate to a draining
lymph node. How well a preparation of DC migrates is best
assessed by conducting migration assays in vivo. Here we
demonstrated that migration of human DC labeled with
superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles can be tracked
to lymph nodes of CB17 scid mice. |
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11:06 |
209. |
Comparison of Rate
of Islet Loss in Syngeneic, Allogeneic and Xenogeneic Grafts
in Rat Using Quantification of Iron Oxide Labeled Islet
Cells by 3D Radial UTE MRI
Lindsey Alexandra Crowe1,
Frederic Ris2, Sonia Nielles-Vallespin3,
Peter Speier3, Michel Kocher4, Solange
Masson2, Christian Toso2, Domenico
Bosco2, Thierry Berney2, Jean-Paul
Vallée1
1Department of
Radiology, Geneva University Hospital, University of Geneva,
Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland; 2Cell
Isolation and Transplant Center, Department of Surgery,
Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland; 3Siemens
AG Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany; 4Biomedical
Imaging Group, School of Engineering, Ecole Polytechnique
Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland
In-vivo 3D difference ultra-short echo time (dUTE) imaging
gives quantitative positive contrast images for serial
examination by automatic segmentation of iron oxide labeled
islet cell clusters transplanted into the liver. Coverage of
the whole liver in the absence of cardiac and respiratory
motion artifact, and isotropic resolution is obtained with
uniform background suppression. Three types of grafts:
syngeneic, allogeneic and xenogeneic, were studied over time
in rat, with success of islet graft, effect of
magnetofection and rate of islet loss measurably different.
The method shows promise for robust long term tracking of
cell rejection in patients. |
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11:18 |
210. |
Long-Term MR
Imaging of Immunocompetent and Immunodeficient Mice Reveals
Distinct Differences in Contrast Clearance in the Brain
- not available
Stacey Marie Cromer Berman1,2,
Assaf A. Gilad1,2, Jeff W. M. Bulte1,2,
Piotr Walczak1,2
1Russell H. Morgan
Dept. of Radiology and Radiological Science, Division of MR
Research, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD, United States; 2Cellular Imaging
Section, Vascular Biology Program, The Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
One
important obstacle for correct interpretation of long-term
MRI cell tracking is the possibility of persisting
hypointense signal even after death of transplanted cells.
In order to evaluate this challenge, SPIO-labeled neural
stem cells were allografted into the brains of
immunocompetent Balb/C mice, inducing cell rejection (dead
cells) and immunodeficient Rag2 mice, with no cell rejection
(live cells). The transplanted cells were monitored in vivo
by MRI for 93 days. Unexpectedly, the MR hypointensities
cleared more rapidly in non-rejecting Rag2 mice than in
rejecting Balb/C mice, indicating that cell proliferation
and migration may dominate clearance of MR signal. |
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11:30 |
211. |
MRI Tracking of
Endogenous Neural Precursors Odor Induced Accumulation in
the Mitral Cell Layer of the Rodent Olfactory Bulb
James P. Sumner1, Der-Yow
Chen1, Stephen Dodd1, Elizabeth Wayne1,2,
Yun Chen1,3, Dragan Maric1, Alan P.
Koretsky1
1National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States; 2University
of Pennsylvania, United States; 3National
Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO, United
States
In
the adult mammals, neural progenitor cells (NPCs) migrate to
the olfactory bulb and differentiate into neurons. These
cells are believed to be involved in processing olfactory
signals. Here we demonstrate that high resolution MRI can
be utilized to evaluate the affects of odor enrichment on
new neurons in the olfactory bulb with anatomical layer
specificity. We found that amyl acetate enrichment resulted
in the accumulation of NPCs in the mitral cell layer. This
in vivo method illustrates the advantages of using high
resolution anatomical imaging in combination with cell
tracking. |
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11:42 |
212. |
Using 19F
MR to Monitor Delivery and Engraftment of Therapeutic Stem
Cells in Vivo: Accuracy Evaluation
Yibin Xie1, Steven M.
Shea2, Yingli Fu3, Wesley D. Gilson2,
Tina Ehtiati2, Ronald Ouwerkerk4,
Dorota Kedziorek3, Meiyappan Solaiyappan3,
Gary Huang3, Steffi Valdeig3, Frank
Wacker3, Dara L. Kraitchman3
1Department of
Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
MD, United States; 2Center for Applied Medical
Imaging, Siemens Research Corporate, Inc., Baltimore, MD,
United States; 3Russell H. Morgan Department of
Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States; 4National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
The
delivery and engraftment of therapeutic stem cells can be
monitored by both 19F MRI and c-arm CT using
alginate-poly-L-lysine-alginate microcapsules loaded with
perfluorooctylbromide (APA-PFOB). MR tracking is
advantageous for high sensitivity and absence of ionizing
radiation. However it suffers from lower resolution. This
study evaluates accuracy of tracking encapsulated
mesenchymal stem cells using 19F MRI relative to
c-arm CT. Results show a high identification and agreement
in the spatial locations and volumes of the injection sites
between MRI and CT demonstrating that MRI provides an
accurate alternative to CT for tracking of encapsulated stem
cells in vivo.
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11:54 |
213. |
Surprising Results
in the Use of MPIOs to Label Bone-Marrow Resident Monocytes
for Immune Cell Tracking by MRI
Bradley Hann1,2, Kevin S.
Tang3, Kevin M. Bennett2, Erik M.
Shapiro3,4
1Biological Health
System Engineering, Arizona State College, Tempe, AZ, United
States; 2School of Biological and Health Systems
Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United
States; 3Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States; 4Department
of Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine,
New Haven, CT, United States
The
accumulation and presence of MPIOs in bone marrow was
studied over seven days. High-resolution, serial in-vivo MRI
was performed on mice injected with various quantities of
MPIOs. MRI signal changes were monitored in bone marrow and
muscle to study MPIO trafficking. In vivo labeling
efficiency of bone marrow-resident monocytes was then
quantified using flow cytometry. Unexpected results were
obtained. It was found that MPIOs did not label monocytes in
marrow. An alternative explanation for the success of MPIOs
in immune cell trafficking is presented, centered around
re-entrance of MPIOs into the circulation long after initial
clearance from the vasculature. |
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12:06 |
214. |
MRI Visualization
of Anatomical Connections in Vivo Using a Gadolinium
Chelated Neural Tracer
Carolyn W. H. Wu1,2, Ning
Liu3, Der-Yow Chen2, Vasalatiy Olga4,
Alan P. Koretsky2, Gary L. Griffiths4,
Roger B. Tootell3,5, Leslie G. Ungerleider3
1NeuroSpin, CEA de
Saclay, Gif sur Yvette, Ile-de-France, France; 2NINDS,
NIH, Bethesda, MD, United States; 3NIMH, NIH,
Bethesda, MD, United States; 4IPDC/NHLBI, NIH,
Rockville, MD, United States; 5MGH, Harvard
University, Charlestown, MA, United States
A
shortcoming of conventional neuroanaomy approaches to study
neuronal circuitry is that it requires visualizing
transported tracer in the post-mortem tissue. The goal of
the study is to expand the MRI contrast media available for
in vivo target-specific, mono-synaptic, neuronal tract
tracing, by testing a new compound that conjugates
conventional neuro-anatomical tracer CTB with GdDOTA. We
show that CTBGdDOTA is a MRI neural tracer that allows in
vivo visualization of mono-synaptically connected brain
circuits, that is target-specific, bi-directional, very
reproducible, and stable over a relatively long period of
time. This agent opens the possibility for repetitive,
chronic, and longitudinal studies.
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12:18 |
215. |
In Vivo Monitoring
of Bacterial Infections Using High-Field MR Microscopy
Volker Sturm1, Tobias
Hertlein2, Thomas Basse-Lüsebrink1,
Daniel Haddad3, Knut Ohlsen2, Peter
Jakob1,3
1Experimental
Physics 5, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany; 2Institute
for Molecular Infection Biology, University of Würzburg,
Würzburg, Germany; 3Research Center for Magnetic
Resonance Bavaria e.V., Würzburg, Germany
In
vivo monitoring of bacterial infection allows effective
testing of potential new drugs and active compounds.
Therefore we investigate native (T2) and marker (19F) based
MRI methods for those requirements. Here the T2 maps have
been proved to be able to visualize the inflammation
formation in a mouse muscle abscess model at even early
stages (day 2), while the 19F- marker accumulate in the area
of infection. The latter has the potential to deliver new
insights into the process of host-pathogen interaction, even
though the exact mode of accumulation had to be investigated
further.
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