Early detection and staging of chronic liver diseases with a protein MRI contrast agent.
Mani SalarianRavi Chakra TuragaShenghui XueMaysam NezafatiKhan HekmatyarJingjuan QiaoYinwei ZhangShanshan TanOluwatosin Y IbhaguiYan HaiJibiao LiRao MukkavilliMalvika SharmaPardeep MittalXiaoyi MinShella KeilholzLiqing YuGengshen QinAlton Brad FarrisZhi-Ren LiuJenny J YangPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Early diagnosis and noninvasive detection of liver fibrosis and its heterogeneity remain as major unmet medical needs for stopping further disease progression toward severe clinical consequences. Here we report a collagen type I targeting protein-based contrast agent (ProCA32.collagen1) with strong collagen I affinity. ProCA32.collagen1 possesses high relaxivities per particle (r1 and r2) at both 1.4 and 7.0 T, which enables the robust detection of early-stage (Ishak stage 3 of 6) liver fibrosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (Ishak stage 1 of 6 or 1 A Mild) in animal models via dual contrast modes. ProCA32.collagen1 also demonstrates vasculature changes associated with intrahepatic angiogenesis and portal hypertension during late-stage fibrosis, and heterogeneity via serial molecular imaging. ProCA32.collagen1 mitigates metal toxicity due to lower dosage and strong resistance to transmetallation and unprecedented metal selectivity for Gd3+ over physiological metal ions with strong translational potential in facilitating effective treatment to halt further chronic liver disease progression.
Keyphrases
- liver fibrosis
- wound healing
- early stage
- magnetic resonance
- tissue engineering
- contrast enhanced
- blood pressure
- single cell
- healthcare
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- lymph node
- computed tomography
- early onset
- protein protein
- radiation therapy
- small molecule
- real time pcr
- label free
- drug delivery
- rectal cancer
- diffusion weighted imaging
- radiation induced
- replacement therapy