| Literature DB >> 27455834 |
Marie Plissonneau1,2, Jonathan Pansieri3, Laurence Heinrich-Balard4,5, Jean-François Morfin6, Nathalie Stransky-Heilkron7, Pascaline Rivory4,5, Pierre Mowat3, Mireille Dumoulin8, Richard Cohen4,5,9, Éric Allémann7, Éva Tόth6, Maria Joao Saraiva10, Cédric Louis1, Olivier Tillement2, Vincent Forge3, François Lux2, Christel Marquette11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Amyloidoses are characterized by the extracellular deposition of insoluble fibrillar proteinaceous aggregates highly organized into cross-β structure and referred to as amyloid fibrils. Nowadays, the diagnosis of these diseases remains tedious and involves multiple examinations while an early and accurate protein typing is crucial for the patients' treatment. Routinely used neuroimaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) using Pittsburgh compound B, [(11)C]PIB, provide structural information and allow to assess the amyloid burden, respectively, but cannot discriminate between different amyloid deposits. Therefore, the availability of efficient multimodal imaging nanoparticles targeting specific amyloid fibrils would provide a minimally-invasive imaging tool useful for amyloidoses typing and early diagnosis. In the present study, we have functionalized gadolinium-based MRI nanoparticles (AGuIX) with peptides highly specific for Aβ amyloid fibrils, LPFFD and KLVFF. The capacity of such nanoparticles grafted with peptide to discriminate among different amyloid proteins, was tested with Aβ(1-42) fibrils and with mutated-(V30M) transthyretin (TTR) fibrils.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid imaging; Beta-amyloid fibrils; Gadolinium based nanoparticles; MRI contrast agent; Peptide-targeting
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27455834 PMCID: PMC4960888 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-016-0212-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 10.435
Fig. 1a Schematic representation of self-auto-aggregation process leading to insoluble amyloid fibrils formation. b Strategy for specific amyloid protein targeting using AGuIX grafted with a selected peptide of Aβ. The nanoparticles are supposed to target the end of Aβ fibrils (represented in green) by the selected and grafted peptide, but not to amyloid fibrils of transthyretin (represented in yellow). c Transmission electronic microscopy pictures of Aβ amyloid fibrils after 7 days of incubation and (d) of transthyretin amyloid fibrils formed with V30M mutated protein, at 20 days of incubation
Fig. 2Amyloid peptide-targeted AGuIX characterization: a hydrodynamic diameter measurements of AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF (pink) and AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD (blue) by dynamic light scattering measurements (λ = 532 nm). b Quantification of the number of peptides grafted on AGuIX® nanoparticles. Circular dichroism signal of free KLVFF at 25, 50, 100, 200 mg L−1 at 212 nm (dotted lines) were reported on standard curve with reporting ellipcicity of peptide on nanoparticles in concentration function. To quantify the number of KLVFF grafted per nanoparticle, various dilution (from 50 to 150 times) (continuous lines) were measure and reported on the graph with a number of peptide correspondence
Transversal and longitudinal relaxivities of the nanoparticles and the molecular contrast agent DOTAREM®, and the ratio between their transversal and their longitudinal relaxivities at 60 MHz and 37 °C
| AGuIX | AGuIX@PEG | AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD | AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF | DOTAREM® | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| r1 (s−1 mM−1) | 10 | 12 | 13.2 | 14.1 | 3.4 |
| r2(s−1 mM−1) | 13.6 | 18.7 | 20.1 | 23.0 | 4.8 |
| r2/r1 | 1.4 | 1.6 | 1.5 | 1.6 | 1.4 |
Fig. 3Spectrofluometry measurement of PIB binding to Aβ (1–42) fibrils or V30M-TTR fibrils following partition experiments (λex = 350 nm and λem = 420 nm). a 2 µM of PIB was added to 20 µM of amyloid fibrils (dotted line) and after 60 min., a pellet with fibrils and PIB bound (double lines) was separated from a supernatant with PIB alone (solid line). (b, c) Binding plots by fluorescence response at 420 nm of PIB bound on Aβ(1–42) fibrils (B) or V30M-TTR fibrils (c) increasing concentration of PIB, fitted as Michaelis model (1:1)
Fig. 4Interaction of KLVFF (a) and LPFFD (b) peptides at several concentrations with Aβ(1–42) fibrils measured by SPR. The sensorgrams obtained (colored curves) were fitted thanks to the Biaevaluation® software with the Langmuir 1:1 model (black curves)
Fig. 5Interaction of functionalized nanoparticles for Aβ(1–42) fibrils or V30M-TTR fibrils assessed by SPR experiments. a Remaining signal of AGuIX@PEG, AGuIX@PEG@Cy5.5, AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD@Cy5.5 and AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF@Cy5.5 at 2.5 mM in Gd3+ on Aβ(1–42) fibrils. The R.U. were measured 141 s after the end of the analyte injection. b, c The sensorgrams (colored curves) obtained for AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD@Cy5.5 (b) and for AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF@Cy5.5 (c) on Aβ(1–42) fibrils were fitted thanks to the Biaevaluation® software with the Langmuir 1:1 model (black curves). c Remaining signal of AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD@Cy5.5 (plain curves) and AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF@Cy5.5 (dashed curves) on Aβ(1–42) fibrils (blue) and V30M-TTR fibrils (red). The R.U. values plotted on the graph correspond to the measures at the time-point 141 s after the end of nanoparticles injection
Fig. 6LPFFD and KLVFF vectorized nanoparticles hybridization on brain slices of APPswe/PS1A246/TTR transgenic (a, c, e, f, g) and control (b, d, h) mice. Imaging beta-amyloid plaques were visualized owing to Cy5.5 fluorescence grafted to AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD@Cy5.5 (zoom in a), and AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF@Cy5.5 (zoom in c), in the near-infra red (yellow color, λexc = 620 nm-λem = 642 nm). Cellular nucleus of brain sections were located using Hoechst dye staining (blue color λexc = 350 nm-λem = 405 nm). AGuIX@PEG@LPFFD@Cy5.5 and AGuIX@PEG@KLVFF@Cy5.5 binding specificity test were performed on brain section without amyloid plaques (b, d), and with nanoparticle without peptides, AGuIX@PEG@Cy5.5 (e), or with a non-related Aβ(1-42) peptide, AGuIX@PEG@TTR-peptide@Cy5.5 (f) on brain section with amyloid plaques. Positive control of amyloid burden was performed using PIB staining on brain sections with (g) and without amyloid plaques (h). Ligands binding are detected by fluorescence imaging of PIB at 400 nm (blue color, g). Tissue architecture was highlighted by imaging actin-phalloidin staining (g, h, red color, λexc = 540 nm-λem = 570 nm)