Fast detection of liver fibrosis with collagen-binding single-nanometer iron oxide nanoparticles via T 1 -weighted MRI.
Juanye ZhangYingying NingHua ZhuNicholas J RotileHe WeiHimashinie DiyabalanageEric C HansenIris Yuwen ZhouStephen C BarrettMozhdeh SojoodiKenneth K TanabeValerie HumbletAlan JasanoffPeter CaravanMoungi G BawendiPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
SNIO-CBP, a single-nanometer iron oxide (SNIO) nanoparticle functionalized with a type I collagen-binding peptide (CBP), was developed as a T 1 -weighted MRI contrast agent with only endogenous elements for fast and noninvasive detection of liver fibrosis. SNIO-CBP exhibits 6.7-fold higher relaxivity compared to a molecular gadolinium-based collagen-binding contrast agent CM-101 on a per CBP basis at 4.7 T. Unlike most iron oxide nanoparticles, SNIO-CBP exhibits fast elimination from the bloodstream with a 5.7 min half-life, high renal clearance, and low, transient liver enhancement in healthy mice. We show that a dose of SNIO-CBP that is 2.5-fold lower than that for CM-101 has comparable imaging efficacy in rapid (within 15 min following intravenous injection) detection of hepatotoxin-induced liver fibrosis using T 1 -weighted MRI in a carbon tetrachloride-induced mouse liver injury model. We further demonstrate the applicability of SNIO-CBP in detecting liver fibrosis in choline-deficient L -amino acid-defined high-fat diet mouse model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. These results provide a platform with potential for the development of high relaxivity, gadolinium-free molecular MRI probes for characterizing chronic liver disease.
Keyphrases
- liver fibrosis
- contrast enhanced
- liver injury
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- iron oxide nanoparticles
- high fat diet
- computed tomography
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- diffusion weighted imaging
- iron oxide
- mouse model
- amino acid
- high glucose
- label free
- adipose tissue
- dna binding
- single molecule
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- risk assessment
- real time pcr
- gram negative
- transcription factor
- network analysis
- low dose
- living cells
- metabolic syndrome
- high dose
- high throughput
- single cell
- blood brain barrier
- fluorescent probe
- mass spectrometry