Literature DB >> 7802866

Magnetoferritin: characterization of a novel superparamagnetic MR contrast agent.

J W Bulte1, T Douglas, S Mann, R B Frankel, B M Moskowitz, R A Brooks, C D Baumgarner, J Vymazal, M P Strub, J A Frank.   

Abstract

A protein-encaged superparamagnetic iron oxide has been developed and characterized by using horse spleen apoferritin as a novel bioreactive environment. The roughly spherical magnetoferritin molecules, 120 A in diameter, are composed of a monocrystalline maghemite or magnetite core 73 A +/- 14 in diameter. Except for the additional presence of iron-rich molecules of higher molecular weight, the appearance and molecular weight (450 kd) of magnetoferritin are identical to that of natural ferritin; the molecules are externally indistinguishable from their precursor, with a pI (isoelectric point) in the range 4.3-4.6. The measured magnetic moment of the superparamagnetic cores is 13,200 Bohr magnetons per molecule, with T1 and T2 relaxivities (r1 and r2) of 8 and 175 L.mmol-1 (Fe).sec-1, respectively, at body temperature and clinical field strengths. The unusually high r2/r1 ratio of 22 is thought to arise from ideal core composition, with no evidence of crystalline paramagnetic inclusions. T2 relaxation enhancement can be well correlated to the field-dependent molecular magnetization, as given by the Langevin magnetization function, raised to a power in the range 1.4-1.6. With its nanodimensional biomimetic protein cage as a rigid, convenient matrix for complexing a plethora of bioactive substances, magnetoferritin may provide a novel template for specific targeting of selected cellular sites.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7802866     DOI: 10.1002/jmri.1880040343

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging        ISSN: 1053-1807            Impact factor:   4.813


  23 in total

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