| Literature DB >> 29944199 |
Johannes Bernarding1, Frederike Euchner1, Christian Bruns1, Rainer Ringleb1, Darius Müller1, Thomas Trantzschel1, Joachim Bargon2, Ute Bommerich1, Markus Plaumann1.
Abstract
Substrates containing 19 F can serve as background-free reporter molecules for NMR and MRI. However, in vivo applications are still limited due to the lower signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) when compared with 1 H NMR. Although hyperpolarization can increase the SNR, to date, only photo-chemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) allows for hyperpolarization without harmful metal catalysts. Photo-CIDNP was shown to significantly enhance 19 F NMR signals of 3-fluoro-DL-tyrosine in aqueous solution using flavins as photosensitizers. However, lasers were used for photoexcitation, which is expensive and requires appropriate protection procedures in a medical or lab environment. Herein, we report 19 F MR hyperpolarization at 4.7 T and 7 T with a biocompatible system using a low-cost and easy-to-handle LED-based set-up. First hyperpolarized 19 F MR images could be acquired, because photo-CIDNP enabled repetitive hyperpolarization without adding new substrates.Entities:
Keywords: 3-fluoro-DL-tyrosine; NMR spectroscopy; fluorine; hyperpolarization; photo-CIDNP
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29944199 PMCID: PMC6220778 DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201800570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemphyschem ISSN: 1439-4235 Impact factor: 3.102
Figure 1Molecular structures of 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine 1 and riboflavin 5′‐monophosphate sodium salt hydrate 2.
Figure 2Section of the 1H NMR spectra of a) 2 mM and b) 4 mM 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine 1 and 0.21 mM riboflavin 5′‐monophosphate sodium salt hydrate 2 dissolved in D2O. For the measurements a 90° pulse was used. The displayed signals were assigned to 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine 1 (see the Supporting Information).
Figure 319F NMR spectra of a) 2 mM and b) 4 mM hyperpolarized 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine 1 and 0.21 mM riboflavin 5′‐monophosphate sodium salt hydrate 2 dissolved in D2O. The thermic signal (violet, no hyperpolarization) serves as a reference for calculating the signal enhancement (8 for 2 mM and 4 for 4 mM).
Figure 4Representative 1H and 19F MR images of a physiologic salt solution containing 2 mM 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine 1 and 0.21 mM riboflavin 5′‐monophosphate sodium salt hydrate 2 were acquired with a multi‐spin echo sequence (RARE) at 4.7 T (200 MHz, Bruker animal scanner; 1 average, TE=14 ms, TR=5000 ms, field of view=50×50 mm, matrix=256×256, slice thickness: 2 mm (axial) or 20 mm (sagittal), RARE factor=8): a) sagittal view with of the sample filled in a 10 mm NMR tube. The optical fiber is visible in both images. b) 19F image of the same sample after hyperpolarizing the 3‐fluoro‐DL‐tyrosine (continuous irradiation during experiment; measurement at 19F tyrosine signal of 188.5330369 MHz using a RARE sequence, 256 averages, TE=14 ms, TR=1000 ms, field of view=50×50 mm, matrix=32×32, slice thickness=20 mm, RARE factor=8). c) 19F image (b) color‐encoded and overlaid onto 1H image (a). No MRI signal was detectable without irradiation (same conditions).