Literature DB >> 33918366

pH Dependence of T2 for Hyperpolarizable 13C-Labelled Small Molecules Enables Spatially Resolved pH Measurement by Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Martin Grashei1, Christian Hundshammer1, Frits H A van Heijster1, Geoffrey J Topping1, Franz Schilling1.   

Abstract

Hyperpolarized 13C magnetic resonance imaging often uses spin-echo-based pulse sequences that are sensitive to the transverse relaxation time T2. In this context, local T2-changes might introduce a quantification bias to imaging biomarkers. Here, we investigated the pH dependence of the apparent transverse relaxation time constant (denoted here as T2) of six 13C-labelled molecules. We obtained minimum and maximum T2 values within pH 1-13 at 14.1 T: [1-13C]acetate (T2,min = 2.1 s; T2,max = 27.7 s), [1-13C]alanine (T2,min = 0.6 s; T2,max = 10.6 s), [1,4-13C2]fumarate (T2,min = 3.0 s; T2,max = 18.9 s), [1-13C]lactate (T2,min = 0.7 s; T2,max = 12.6 s), [1-13C]pyruvate (T2,min = 0.1 s; T2,max = 18.7 s) and 13C-urea (T2,min = 0.1 s; T2,max = 0.1 s). At 7 T, T2-variation in the physiological pH range (pH 6.8-7.8) was highest for [1-13C]pyruvate (ΔT2 = 0.95 s/0.1pH) and [1-13C]acetate (ΔT2 = 0.44 s/0.1pH). Concentration, salt concentration, and temperature alterations caused T2 variations of up to 45.4% for [1-13C]acetate and 23.6% for [1-13C]pyruvate. For [1-13C]acetate, spatially resolved pH measurements using T2-mapping were demonstrated with 1.6 pH units accuracy in vitro. A strong proton exchange-based pH dependence of T2 suggests that pH alterations potentially influence signal strength for hyperpolarized 13C-acquisitions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  13C-labeled biomolecules; T2 relaxation time constant; [1-13C]acetate; [1-13C]pyruvate; hyperpolarization; hyperpolarized MRI; magnetic resonance spectroscopy; pH

Year:  2021        PMID: 33918366     DOI: 10.3390/ph14040327

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)        ISSN: 1424-8247


  1 in total

1.  Performance and reproducibility of 13C and 15N hyperpolarization using a cryogen-free DNP polarizer.

Authors:  Arianna Ferrari; Josh Peters; Mariia Anikeeva; Andrey Pravdivtsev; Frowin Ellermann; Kolja Them; Olga Will; Eva Peschke; Hikari Yoshihara; Olav Jansen; Jan-Bernd Hövener
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 4.996

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.