| Literature DB >> 35803961 |
Arianna Ferrari1, Josh Peters2, Mariia Anikeeva2, Andrey Pravdivtsev2, Frowin Ellermann2, Kolja Them2, Olga Will2, Eva Peschke2, Hikari Yoshihara3, Olav Jansen4, Jan-Bernd Hövener5.
Abstract
The setup, operational procedures and performance of a cryogen-free device for producing hyperpolarized contrast agents using dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (dDNP) in a preclinical imaging center is described. The polarization was optimized using the solid-state, DNP-enhanced NMR signal to calibrate the sample position, microwave and NMR frequency and power and flip angle. The polarization of a standard formulation to yield ~ 4 mL, 60 mM 1-13C-pyruvic acid in an aqueous solution was quantified in five experiments to P(13C) = (38 ± 6) % (19 ± 1) s after dissolution. The mono-exponential time constant of the build-up of the solid-state polarization was quantified to (1032 ± 22) s. We achieved a duty cycle of 1.5 h that includes sample loading, monitoring the polarization build-up, dissolution and preparation for the next run. After injection of the contrast agent in vivo, pyruvate, pyruvate hydrate, lactate, and alanine were observed, by measuring metabolite maps. Based on this work sequence, hyperpolarized 15N urea was obtained (P(15N) = (5.6 ± 0.8) % (30 ± 3) s after dissolution).Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35803961 PMCID: PMC9270333 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15380-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Photo (a,b) and diagram (c) of the polarizer used in this work. The polarizer consists of a dissolution module (a) mounted on the magnet (b section, magenta square) and a rack for auxiliary parts. The dissolution module (a) contains an inlet for the dissolution medium (DM), a heater for DM (5), a Swagelok manifold (1–4), a switch valve (6), the sample cup and an outlet. The magnet (b section, magenta square) is equipped with a variable temperature inset (VTI) which is cooled down to 1.4 K by evacuating a bath of liquid helium at the bottom of the VTI. The pressure of helium gas inside the VTI and in the inlet are shown by P1 (8) and P2 monitors respectively. The DNP probe inside the VTI consists of a tunnel for the sample cup, a waveguide to transmit the microwaves, and an NMR coil at the bottom. The sample is inserted into the VTI via an airlock (7) on top. The rack is used to house the pump circulating the Helium of the VTI, an NMR spectrometer, the magnet power supply, temperature controllers and the user interface. Figure c shows a schematic view of the polarizer naming all the main components.
Figure 2Drawings of the dDNP system indicating the dimension, stray magnetic field (dashed lines) and operator area (red line). (Drawings are reproduced from SpinAligner User Manual with permission).
Basic calibrations of NMR and DNP.
| Step | Operation | Duration | Results and comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tune and match the NMR coil to estimated ν63Cu Record 63Cu NMR signal and refine ν63Cu Calculate | 2 min | 63Cu signal originates from the coil itself, no sample needed |
| 2 | Insert DNP sample Tune and match NMR coil to the desired nucleus Perform microwave frequency sweep Use hyperpolarized NMR signal to adjust RF transmitter | ||
| 3 | Insert DNP sample (or leave it after step 2 inside) Tune and match NMR coil to desired nucleus Perform | ca. 60 min | |
| 4 | Insert DNP sample (or leave it after step 2 inside) Acquire NMR signal for different sample positions | ca. 30 min | Optimal position xs found at 10 mm above bottom; closer to bottom assures colder sample temperature |
| 5 | Insert DNP sample and adjust coil Perform DNP until sufficient signal is obtained Apply train of low flip angle pulses Fit signals to obtain α for the given | Several iterations may be needed to fulfill low flip angle condition. Depending on the sample position in the coil and VTI (Step 4) |
Note that the results of some steps are dependable on another and may need to be repeated (e.g. No. 3–5).
General procedure to prepare contrast agent (CA) concentrates for DNP.
| Step | Operation | Duration (min) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Take CA and trityl radical out of the freezer/fridge | 5 | Consider storing conditions and shelf life of agents |
| 2 | Wait until CA and radical are melted | 20 | Keep the vials in a warm place. Avoid the direct sunlight |
| 3 | Add desired amount of CA to the vial (e.g. 1.3 g) | 2 | e.g. Eppendorf vial |
| 4 | Add deionized water and glycerol in sufficient quantities (e.g. 0.5 g each) | 2 | Use scales to measure glycerol |
| Check for the glassy matrix by dropping 5 µL of the solution in liquid nitrogen | |||
| 5 | Put desired amount of radical in a vial (e.g. ~ 50 mg) | 2 | |
| 6 | Mix CA and radical | 10 | Using spatula or ultrasonic mixer e.g |
| 7 | Divide in ca. 250 µL aliquots | 5 | Using pipet, Eppendorf vial |
| 8 | Put mixtures in freezer | 1 | e.g. − 20 °C |
| 9 | Warm up one vial, retrieve desired amount of concentrate, freeze remaining aliquot | 15 |
Standard procedure to prepare pyruvate samples.
| Step | Operation | Duration | Comments | Standard settings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Take one aliquot of around 1.5 mL of 1-13C-PA and one aliquot of around 50 mg of trityl radical out of the fridge | Before use store at − 20 °C | ||
| 2 | Wait until the pyruvic acid warms up and becomes liquid | 20 min | Keep the vial in a warm place. Avoid direct sunlight | |
| 3 | Put 25.8 mg of trityl radical in a vial | e.g. Eppendorf tubes | ||
| 4 | Add 0.68 g of 1-13C-PA into the vial | |||
| 5 | Mix it | 10 min | Centrifuge the vial | |
| 6 | Divide into c.a. 250 µL aliquots | e.g. Eppendorf tubes | ||
| 7 | Put in the freezer | Store at − 20 °C |
Figure 3Calibration of the sample position and flip angle. (a) DNP-enhanced, solid-state 13C-NMR signal of pyruvate as a function of the position of the sample in probe. To ensure sufficient signal, the sample was first polarized for 40 min. Then the 13C signal was acquired at different positions xs every minute using a low flip angle of 2°. Moving the sample first down, then up, a broad maximum around xs = 14 mm was found. Straight lines were plotted to guide the eye. (b) DNP-enhanced 13C NMR signal acquired by a train of = 2 us, = 18 dB pulses with TX = 217 µs, TR = 1 s, NS = 1, NX = 49. By fitting a mono-exponential function to the data (red line, 13.3 s, Eq. 1), the flip angle was determined to α = 3.2° (Eq. 2).
Figure 4Optimization of 13C polarization transfer. DNP-enhanced, solid state 13C-NMR signal of pyruvate at ≈ 1.4 K as a function of microwave frequency (a, = 30 mW) and microwave power (b, νMF ≈ 187.135 GHz). When the frequency was varied (a), two extrema were observed, and the first maximum at ≈ 187.135 GHz was chosen for later experiments. For the power sweep, the signal was found to increase up to 20 mW; 16 mW was used in the subsequent experiments. Straight lines were added to guide the eye. 13C polarization was destroyed after each signal acquisition. Each data point corresponds to the 13C-signals acquired after 2 min of DNP. NMR acquisition parameters were 2 µs, 3 dB, NS = 4, and α ≈ 18°.
Figure 5Quantification of solid-state polarization. Solid-state, 13C-NMR signals of 14 M 1-13C pyruvic acid mixed with 30 mM radical (112.3 mg total sample weight) monitored with low flip angle excitations ( ~ 0.32°, NS = NX = 256, TR = 1 h (a) or TR = 5 min (b)) while reaching thermal equilibrium at ≈ 1.4 K and 6.7 T (a) and during DNP (b). Blue squares indicate the spectra shown below (c, d). By fitting a mono-exponential recovery function (Eq. 5) to the polarization build up without µW (a) and with µW (b) and correcting for the RF excitations (Eq. 6), a solid-state relaxation , signal at thermal equilibrium , DNP build-up time TDNP = (18.396 ± 0.49) min and equilibrium signal = ( ± ) a.u. were obtained (note that this build up is faster than for the standard sample). The polarization of the spectrum acquired after 110 min DNP was quantified to (110 min) = (110 min) / ≈ 64%. Without RF excitations the expected steady state signal is estimated to be = / ≈ 61% The spectra (c) and (d) are the last measured thermal recovery and DNP spectra (marked on (a) and (b) with blue rectangles). The first six datapoints in (a) were neglected for the fit because of very low SNR.
Figure 6High resolution 13C-NMR spectra of hyperpolarized (black) thermally polarized (blue) 1-13C-PA measured at 1 T (a) and 9.4 T (b). (a) The hyperpolarized signal was measured in a single scan (NSDNP = 1) after approx. 26 s after dissolution ( = 5°, pw = 3.05 µs, pa = − 5.6 dB, SDNP = 32.38 a.u.). The thermally polarized signal was acquired adding 4 vol% Gd contrast agent ( = 20°, pw = 12.20 µs, pa = − 5.6 dB, SDNP = 4.18 × 10−4 a.u.). The resulting signal enhancement to SDNP was 1.09 × 109 (Eq. 8), and the polarization = 26% (Eqs. 9, 10). (b) At 9.4 T, the signal was acquired ≈ 30 s after dissolution using a 5° pulse (SDNP = 7.59 × 105 a.u., pw = 10 µs, pa = − 18.9 dB, RG = 0.25) and quantified with respect to the thermally polarized signal acquired with a single 90° pulse (STP = 1.41 × 105 a.u., pw = 0.55 µs, pa = − 18.9 dB, RG = 101) to an enhancement of 2.5 × 104 (Eq. 8) and polarization of 20% (Eqs. 9, 10). Note that due to the differences in the RG, both hyperpolarized spectra were normalized to 1 and the thermal spectrum measured at 1 T was multiplied by 5000 to fit in the scale.
Routine DNP procedure conducted before and during each DNP experiments.
| Step | Parameter | Comments | Standard settings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fluid path | Flush the sample path before inserting the sample | |
| 2 | 13C transmitter frequency | Compare to calibrated value. Coincides with the center of the spectrum | ± 10 kHz to calibrated value; adjust 13C and |
| 3 | 13C resonance frequency | Compare to transmitter frequency | |
| 4 | Resonance of the coil | Adjust variable capacitors if necessary | Reflection less than 10% |
| 5 | Calculate | ||
| 6 | Buildup rate | Observe for abnormalities. Analysis mode should be set to integral | |
| 7 | Monitor SS signal | Check for good SNR |
Standard operational procedure for dDNP experiments.
| No | Operation | Duration | Comments | Norm values |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Check T of VTI (P1, P2) | T = 1.38–1.4 K P1 ≈ 1.3 mBar P2 ≈ 250–350 mBar | ||
| 2 | Warm up stock CA-radical concentrate until liquid | 10 min | Protect from light | |
| 3 | Flush fluid path with air | 10 min | Automatic | |
| 4 | Add CA-radical concentrate to cup | 5 min | Use micropipet, add to the bottom, avoid smudging to walls | 18–19 µL ≈ 22 mg (for 13C) And 50 uL ≈ 50 mg (for 15N) |
| 5 | Prepare liquid nitrogen (lN2) | 2 min | Place non-magnetic dewar next to the magnet | < 500 mL of lN2 |
| 6 | Connect sample cup to polarizer: - Connect empty cup - Flush with He - Disconnect cup, connect cup with a sample - Dip cup in lN2 - Pressurize fluid path | 3 min | Mark vial to avoid damage to thread by over tightening Use cryogenic gloves Immerse slowly into lN2 Pressurize while in lN2 | Immersion into lN2 for 30 s |
| 20 s | ||||
| 7 | Insert cup into VTI | 5 min | Hurry but stay calm: open airlock, remove plug, insert sample, close airlock, start automatic insertion procedure Manually guide tube if needed. Use gloves | |
| 8 | Position cup in VTI/NMR coil | Mark lowest position on tube e.g. with tape | 10 mm above lowest position | |
| 9 | Check that the NMR coil is in resonance | 2 min | Adjust tuning and matching capacitors | Tune within ± 20 kHz, match 1–2% |
| 10 | Wait for temperature T and pressure to stabilize (P1, P2) | 5 min | Insertion causes temperature and pressure increase | Close to starting temperature, e.g. T = 1.38 – 1–4 K |
| 11 | Start DNP 11a: start monitoring 13C NMR (SpinIt) 11b: start DNP (SpinAligner) | 60 min | Check that Check 13C NMR signal | |
| 12 | Prepare MRI/NMR | Adjust resonance of the probe, create a new protocol, shims of the system, create new project, free space to ease transport | ||
| 13 | Inject dissolution medium in heater | Standard dissolution medium suitable for tracer | 5 mL | |
| 14 | Initiate heating of dissolution medium | 5 min | Close the cover of polarizer | Automatic, ready when 11 bar reached |
| 15 | Prepare receiver vessel/syringe | Weigh and label NMR tubes and place receiver in the stray field | ||
| 16 | Put on safety equipment: Goggles, gloves | Caution! Hot liquids, high pressures! | ||
| 17 | Raise cup | 30 s | Raise cup above lHe level to reduce lHe boil off | Rise by 8 cm |
| 18 | Execute dissolution | < 30 s | Hot liquid at high pressure and speed will be ejected | Automatic |
| 19 | Collect hyperpolarized medium e.g. to syringe and apply | 5 s | Draw in syringe for manual injection, transfer via tubes to detection site | |
| 20 | Transfer NMR samples or syringe to NMR/MRI and execute pulse sequences when sample is at the detection position | 30 s | A fast transfer is necessary | |
| 21 | Take out the sample cup, conserve the airlock, perform the cleaning | 15 min | Wash the heater 3 times with deionized water, then dry at least 10 min | 10 mL of water to clean the system each time |
dDNP maintenance routine, conducted once a week (automatically and scheduled).
| No | Operation | Comments | Norm values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stop the dry pump | 0 Hz | ||
| Reduce the He flow | |||
| The VTI T increases automatically | It takes at least 6 h | 150 K (at least) | |
| The system stays warm for at least 38 h | It is possible to use the entire weekend | ||
| Automatic cleaning of the VTI by using the vacuum pump when the T is higher than 150 K | |||
| Decrease the T again | ~ 3 h |
The total duration is 48 h from the start of the routine.
Reproducibility of hyperpolarized 13C pyruvate in aqueous solution as contrast agent for MRI.
| No | c(13C) (mM) | TDNP (s) | ttrans (s) | ε | P(ttrans) (%) | P(0) (%) | T1 (s) | pH | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 61.19 | 1000 | 19 | 46.2 | 450 | 400,206 | 34 | 42.3 | 88 | 8.40 |
| 2 | 59.51 | 1047 | 19 | 37.2 | 380 | 385,863 | 33 | 39.6 | 101 | 8.32 |
| 3 | 58.39 | 1018 | 20 | 41.1 | 380 | 421,095 | 36 | 44.8 | 89 | 8.90 |
| 4 | 59.23 | 1048 | 20 | 46.5 | 330 | 547,196 | 46 | 57.5 | 94 | 8.77 |
| 5 | 56.14 | 1045 | 17 | 39.5 | 310 | 502,997 | 43 | 51.9 | 87 | 8.65 |
Mean and coefficient of variance (cv) for concentration of 1-13C-PA after the dissolution, fitted time constant of the hyperpolarization build-up (TDNP), transfer time to 1 T NMR, liquid-state NMR signal of hyperpolarized sample S normalized to the largest signal (sample 4), liquid-state NMR signal in thermal equilibrium () normalized to the largest signal (sample 1), polarization at the time of measurement P(t), estimated polarization directly after the dissolution P(0) and lifetime (T1) of hyperpolarization at 1 T (the enhancement was calculated using flip angle α = 5º, RG = 31, ns = 1 for hyperpolarized sample, and α = 20º, with a RG = 31, and ns = 3600 for the thermally polarized sample). Significant values are in [bold].
Figure 7High resolution 13C-NMR spectra of hyperpolarized (black) thermally polarized (blue) 1-13C-PA (sample 5 in the table) measured at 1 T. The hyperpolarized signal was measured in a single scan (NSDNP = 1) after approx. 17 s after dissolution ( = 5°, pw = 3.05 µs, pa = − 5.6 dB). The thermally polarized signal was acquired adding 4 vol% Gd contrast agent ( = 20°, pw = 12.20 µs, pa = − 5.6 dB, SDNP = 39.5 a.u.). The resulting signal enhancement to SDNP was 310 × 106 (Eq. 8), and the polarization = 43% (Eqs. 9, 10). The thermal spectrum measured was multiplied by 50,000 to fit in the scale.
Figure 8In vivo T1w 1H-MRI, maps of hyperpolarized 1-13C-PA and 1-13C-lactate (LA) and selected 13C spectra of a pancreatic tumor rat model acquired at 7 T. After the injection of 100 µl hyperpolarized contrast agent containing ~ 46 mM 1-13C-PA, eight CSI datasets were acquired. Prominent signal of lactate was found in the regions of kidney (ROI1), liver (ROI2), aorta and inferior vena cava branch (ROI3). Strong SNR was observed in the selected voxel (blue rectangle), exhibiting resonances of lactate, pyruvate and alanine (Ala) with a line width of ca. 84 Hz. The receive-only loop-coil was positioned ventral (yellow rectangle) and a small container filled with water was placed in the middle of the coil (green rectangle, phantom—Pha). Note that the tubes supplying warm water to the animal bed appeared on the top because of aliasing. The sum of eight consequent acquisitions is shown.