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Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Atherosclerotic Plaque at Clinically Relevant Field Strengths (1T) by Targeting the Integrin α4β1

Inflammation drives the degradation of atherosclerotic plaque, yet there are no non-invasive techniques available for imaging overall inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques, especially in the coronary arteries. To address this, we have developed a clinically relevant system to image overall inflamm...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Woodside, Darren G., Tanifum, Eric A., Ghaghada, Ketan B., Biediger, Ronald J., Caivano, Amy R., Starosolski, Zbigniew A., Khounlo, Sayadeth, Bhayana, Saakshi, Abbasi, Shahrzad, Craft, John W., Maxwell, David S., Patel, Chandreshkumar, Stupin, Igor V., Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan, Market, Robert V., Willerson, James T., Dixon, Richard A. F., Vanderslice, Peter, Annapragada, Ananth V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5829217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29487319
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21893-x
Descripción
Sumario:Inflammation drives the degradation of atherosclerotic plaque, yet there are no non-invasive techniques available for imaging overall inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques, especially in the coronary arteries. To address this, we have developed a clinically relevant system to image overall inflammatory cell burden in plaque. Here, we describe a targeted contrast agent (THI0567-targeted liposomal-Gd) that is suitable for magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and binds with high affinity and selectivity to the integrin α4β1(very late antigen-4, VLA-4), a key integrin involved in recruiting inflammatory cells to atherosclerotic plaques. This liposomal contrast agent has a high T1 relaxivity (~2 × 10(5) mM(−1)s(−1) on a particle basis) resulting in the ability to image liposomes at a clinically relevant MR field strength. We were able to visualize atherosclerotic plaques in various regions of the aorta in atherosclerosis-prone ApoE(−/−) mice on a 1 Tesla small animal MRI scanner. These enhanced signals corresponded to the accumulation of monocyte/macrophages in the subendothelial layer of atherosclerotic plaques in vivo, whereas non-targeted liposomal nanoparticles did not demonstrate comparable signal enhancement. An inflammatory cell-targeted method that has the specificity and sensitivity to measure the inflammatory burden of a plaque could be used to noninvasively identify patients at risk of an acute ischemic event.