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Introducing Specificity to Iron Oxide Nanoparticle Imaging by Combining 57Fe-Based MRI and Mass Spectrometry.

Max MasthoffRebecca BuchholzAndre BeukerLydia WachsmuthAlexander KraupnerFranziska AlbersFelix FrepponAnne HelfenMirjam GerwingCarsten HöltkeUwe HansenJan RehkämperTorsten VielhaberWalter HeindelMichel EisenblätterUwe KarstMoritz WildgruberCornelius Faber
Published in: Nano letters (2019)
Iron oxide nanoparticles (ION) are highly sensitive probes for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that have previously been used for in vivo cell tracking and have enabled implementation of several diagnostic tools to detect and monitor disease. However, the in vivo MRI signal of ION can overlap with the signal from endogenous iron, resulting in a lack of detection specificity. Therefore, the long-term fate of administered ION remains largely unknown, and possible tissue deposition of iron cannot be assessed with established methods. Herein, we combine nonradioactive 57Fe-ION MRI with ex vivo laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) imaging, enabling unambiguous differentiation between endogenous iron (56Fe) and iron originating from applied ION in mice. We establish 57Fe-ION as an in vivo MRI sensor for cell tracking in a mouse model of subcutaneous inflammation and for assessing the long-term fate of 57Fe-ION. Our approach resolves the lack of detection specificity in ION imaging by unambiguously recording a 57Fe signature.
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