Login / Signup

Triplet dynamic nuclear polarization of pyruvate via supramolecular chemistry.

Tomoyuki HamachiKoki NishimuraKeita SakamotoYusuke KawashimaHironori KounoShunsuke SatoGo WatanabeKenichiro TateishiTomohiro UesakaNobuhiro Yanai
Published in: Chemical science (2023)
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) significantly improves the sensitivity of magnetic resonance imaging, and its most important medical application is cancer diagnosis via hyperpolarized 13 C-labeled pyruvate. Unlike cryogenic DNP, triplet-DNP uses photoexcited triplet electrons under mild conditions. However, triplet-DNP of pyruvate has not been observed because of incompatibility of the hydrophobic polarizing agent with hydrophilic pyruvate. This work demonstrates that supramolecular complexation with β-cyclodextrin can disperse 4,4'-(pentacene-6,13-diyl)dibenzoate (NaPDBA), a pentacene derivative with hydrophilic substituents, even in the presence of high sodium pyruvate concentrations. The polarization of photoexcited triplet electron spins in NaPDBA was transferred to the 13 C spins of sodium pyruvate via triplet-DNP of 1 H spins in water and 1 H-to- 13 C cross-polarization. This provides an important step toward the widespread use of ultra-sensitive MRI for cancer diagnosis.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • papillary thyroid
  • healthcare
  • high resolution
  • ionic liquid
  • water soluble