| Literature DB >> 32915268 |
Bethany Mills1, Alicia Megia-Fernandez2, Dominic Norberg3, Sheelagh Duncan3, Adam Marshall3, Ahsan R Akram3, Thomas Quinn3, Irene Young3, Annya M Bruce3, Emma Scholefield3, Gareth O S Williams3, Nikola Krstajić3, Tushar R Choudhary3,4, Helen E Parker3,5, Michael G Tanner3,6, Kerrianne Harrington7, Harry A C Wood7, Timothy A Birks7, Jonathan C Knight7, Christopher Haslett3, Kevin Dhaliwal3, Mark Bradley8, Muhammed Ucuncu9,10, James M Stone11.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The relentless rise in antimicrobial resistance is a major societal challenge and requires, as part of its solution, a better understanding of bacterial colonization and infection. To facilitate this, we developed a highly efficient no-wash red optical molecular imaging agent that enables the rapid, selective, and specific visualization of Gram-positive bacteria through a bespoke optical fiber-based delivery/imaging endoscopic device.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria; Fluorescence; Gram-positive; Lung; Optical endomicroscopy; Optical imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32915268 PMCID: PMC7485201 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-020-05021-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Fig. 1Synthesis and characterization of the environmentally responsive imaging agent. a Synthesis of Merocy-Van by reductive amination of vancomycin with the aldehyde dye. b HPLC trace of the purified imaging agent (detection at 600 nm). c HRMS spectra of Merocy-Van (experimental trace (top) vs theoretical (bottom)). d Absorbance (dashed trace) and emission spectra of the imaging agent with increasing levels of DMSO (DMSO/saline, vol/vol)
Fig. 2Merocy-Van selectively labels Gram-positive bacteria. a S. aureus, MRSA, S. epidermidis, S. pneumoniae, E. coli, P. aeruginosa, and S. aureus/mononuclear cell (PBMC) or granulocyte (PMN) co-cultures were imaged by confocal microscopy following the addition of 5 μM probe (magenta). Image inserts show counterstained bacteria/cells (green). Representative images from nine fields-of-view from three independent repeats. Scale bar = 5 μm. b Quantification of images from (a) (relative fluorescence intensity from n = 90 bacteria, n = 20 mononuclear cell, and n = 20 granulocyte per condition, one-way ANOVA ****P < 0.0001). Dashed line shows background fluorescence. c Wash-free confocal imaging of Gram-negative (green) and Gram-positive (magenta) bacteria with NBD-PMX and Merocy-Van. Primary isolated human mononuclear cells were pre-labeled with Hoechst prior to adding to the confocal chamber. Scale bar = 5 μm, n = 3
Fig. 3Merocy-Van selectively labels S. aureus in an ex vivo human lung model. a The endomicroscopy fluorescence imaging system used. b The packaged three-in-one fiber-based endomicroscopy device. c End of view of the distal tip of the fiber-based endomicroscopy device. The outer diameter of the device is 1.4 mm, and the optical imaging bundle field-of-view is 450 μm (right of the image) and the internal diameter of the glass capillaries is 326 μm. d Image of the imaging fiber (8100 cores). e Diagram of a human lung and infection/imaging locations used. f Image of an ex vivo human lung undergoing ventilation with the imaging device inserted within the distal lung (blue light within the white circle). Insert shows blow-up of device distal end location (blue light). g Representative images of real-time Merocy-Van (1 μM) delivery into human ex vivo lung (baseline and following 0.4 nmol delivery shown) within S. aureus (top) and control (bottom) lung lobes. Green: capturing lung autofluorescence. Red: capturing activated Merocy-Van. Each large panel shows two-color overlay; insert shows red channel only. Scale bar = 50 μm. h Average red fluorescence intensity per frame during real-time delivery of 0.4 nmol Merocy-Van (1 μM) into S. aureus and control lung lobes (data shown from lung 1, see Fig. S5 for lungs 2 and 3)