| Literature DB >> 25971726 |
Shenghui Xue1, Hua Yang2, Jingjuan Qiao3, Fan Pu3, Jie Jiang4, Kendra Hubbard4, Khan Hekmatyar5, Jason Langley6, Mani Salarian4, Robert C Long7, Robert G Bryant8, Xiaoping Philip Hu6, Hans E Grossniklaus2, Zhi-Ren Liu9, Jenny J Yang10.
Abstract
With available MRI techniques, primary and metastatic liver cancers that are associated with high mortality rates and poor treatment responses are only diagnosed at late stages, due to the lack of highly sensitive contrast agents without Gd(3+) toxicity. We have developed a protein contrast agent (ProCA32) that exhibits high stability for Gd(3+) and a 10(11)-fold greater selectivity for Gd(3+) over Zn(2+) compared with existing contrast agents. ProCA32, modified from parvalbumin, possesses high relaxivities (r1/r2: 66.8 mmol(-1)⋅s(-1)/89.2 mmol(-1)⋅s(-1) per particle). Using T1- and T2-weighted, as well as T2/T1 ratio imaging, we have achieved, for the first time (to our knowledge), robust MRI detection of early liver metastases as small as ∼0.24 mm in diameter, much smaller than the current detection limit of 10-20 mm. Furthermore, ProCA32 exhibits appropriate in vivo preference for liver sinusoidal spaces and pharmacokinetics for high-quality imaging. ProCA32 will be invaluable for noninvasive early detection of primary and metastatic liver cancers as well as for monitoring treatment and guiding therapeutic interventions, including drug delivery.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; T2/T1 ratio imaging; contrast agents; metastasis; uveal melanoma
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25971726 PMCID: PMC4450423 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1423021112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205