M Nadeem Asghar1, Rohini Emani, Catharina Alam, Terhi O Helenius, Tove J Grönroos, Outi Sareila, Mueez U Din, Rikard Holmdahl, Arno Hänninen, Diana M Toivola. 1. *Department of Biosciences, Cell Biology, Åbo Akademi University, Biocity, Turku, Finland; †Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, and ‡Turku PET Center, Medicity Research Laboratory, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; §Medical Inflammation Research, MBB, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; ‖Medicity Research Laboratory, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; and ¶Turku Center for Disease modeling, Turku, Finland.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traditional techniques analyzing mouse colitis are invasive, laborious, or indirect. Development of in vivo imaging techniques for specific colitis processes would be useful for monitoring disease progression and/or treatment effectiveness. The aim was to evaluate the applicability of the chemiluminescent probe L-012, which detects reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, for in vivo colitis imaging. METHODS: Two genetic colitis mouse models were used; K8 knockout (K8(-/-)) mice, which develop early colitis and the nonobese diabetic mice, which develop a transient subclinical colitis. Dextran sulphate sodium was used as a chemical colitis model. Mice were anesthetized, injected intraperitoneally with L-012, imaged, and quantified for chemiluminescent signal in the abdominal region using an IVIS camera system. RESULTS: K8(-/-) and nonobese diabetic mice showed increased L-012-mediated chemiluminescence from the abdominal region compared with control mice. L-012 signals correlated with the colitis phenotype assessed by histology and myeloperoxidase staining. Although L-012 chemiluminescence enabled detection of dextran sulphate sodium-induced colitis at an earlier time point compared with traditional methods, large mouse-to-mouse variations were noted. In situ and ex vivo L-012 imaging as well as [18F]FDG-PET imaging of K8(-/-) mice confirmed that the in vivo signals originated from the distal colon. L-012 in vivo imaging showed a wide variation in reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in young mice, irrespective of K8 genotype. In aging mice L-012 signals were consistently higher in K8(-/-) as compared to K8(+/+) mice. CONCLUSIONS: In vivo imaging using L-012 is a useful, simple, and cost-effective tool to study the level and longitudinal progression of genetic and possibly chemical murine colitis.
BACKGROUND: Traditional techniques analyzing mousecolitis are invasive, laborious, or indirect. Development of in vivo imaging techniques for specific colitis processes would be useful for monitoring disease progression and/or treatment effectiveness. The aim was to evaluate the applicability of the chemiluminescent probe L-012, which detects reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, for in vivo colitis imaging. METHODS: Two genetic colitismouse models were used; K8 knockout (K8(-/-)) mice, which develop early colitis and the nonobese diabeticmice, which develop a transient subclinical colitis. Dextran sulphate sodium was used as a chemical colitis model. Mice were anesthetized, injected intraperitoneally with L-012, imaged, and quantified for chemiluminescent signal in the abdominal region using an IVIS camera system. RESULTS: K8(-/-) and nonobese diabeticmice showed increased L-012-mediated chemiluminescence from the abdominal region compared with control mice. L-012 signals correlated with the colitis phenotype assessed by histology and myeloperoxidase staining. Although L-012 chemiluminescence enabled detection of dextran sulphate sodium-induced colitis at an earlier time point compared with traditional methods, large mouse-to-mouse variations were noted. In situ and ex vivo L-012 imaging as well as [18F]FDG-PET imaging of K8(-/-) mice confirmed that the in vivo signals originated from the distal colon. L-012 in vivo imaging showed a wide variation in reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in young mice, irrespective of K8 genotype. In aging miceL-012 signals were consistently higher in K8(-/-) as compared to K8(+/+) mice. CONCLUSIONS: In vivo imaging using L-012 is a useful, simple, and cost-effective tool to study the level and longitudinal progression of genetic and possibly chemical murinecolitis.
Authors: Collin-Jamal Smith; Denise E Allard; Yan Wang; James F Howard; Stephanie A Montgomery; Maureen A Su Journal: J Immunol Date: 2018-01-24 Impact factor: 5.422
Authors: M Nadeem Asghar; Jonas S G Silvander; Terhi O Helenius; Iris A K Lähdeniemi; Catharina Alam; Lina E Fortelius; Rickard O Holmsten; Diana M Toivola Journal: PLoS One Date: 2015-05-22 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Linglu Wang; Ponnuswamy Mohanasundaram; Michelle Lindström; Muhammad Nadeem Asghar; Giulia Sultana; Julia O Misiorek; Yaming Jiu; Hongbo Chen; Zhi Chen; Diana M Toivola; Fang Cheng; John E Eriksson Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol Date: 2022-03-25
Authors: Carl-Gustaf A Stenvall; Mina Tayyab; Tove J Grönroos; Maria A Ilomäki; Keijo Viiri; Karen M Ridge; Lauri Polari; Diana M Toivola Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci Date: 2021-12-24 Impact factor: 9.207