Single-nanometer iron oxide nanoparticles as tissue-permeable MRI contrast agents.
He WeiAgata WiśniowskaJingxuan FanPeter HarveyYuanyuan LiVictoria WuEric C HansenJuanye ZhangMichael G KaulAbigail M FreyGerhard AdamAnatoly I FrenkelMoungi G BawendiAlan JasanoffPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Magnetic nanoparticles are robust contrast agents for MRI and often produce particularly strong signal changes per particle. Leveraging these effects to probe cellular- and molecular-level phenomena in tissue can, however, be hindered by the large sizes of typical nanoparticle contrast agents. To address this limitation, we introduce single-nanometer iron oxide (SNIO) particles that exhibit superparamagnetic properties in conjunction with hydrodynamic diameters comparable to small, highly diffusible imaging agents. These particles efficiently brighten the signal in T 1 -weighted MRI, producing per-molecule longitudinal relaxation enhancements over 10 times greater than conventional gadolinium-based contrast agents. We show that SNIOs permeate biological tissue effectively following injection into brain parenchyma or cerebrospinal fluid. We also demonstrate that SNIOs readily enter the brain following ultrasound-induced blood-brain barrier disruption, emulating the performance of a gadolinium agent and providing a basis for future biomedical applications. These results thus demonstrate a platform for MRI probe development that combines advantages of small-molecule imaging agents with the potency of nanoscale materials.