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Multimodal Imaging with NanoGd Reveals Spatiotemporal Features of Neuroinflammation after Experimental Stroke. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study proposes and validates a new MRI tool using a multimodal nanoprobe called NanoGd to monitor neuroinflammation after ischemic stroke, focusing on its effects on phagocytic cells.
  • In laboratory tests, NanoGd was shown to be effectively taken up by microglia and led to observable changes in MRI signals in mouse models of stroke.
  • Results suggest that NanoGd enhances MRI as a technique for identifying neuroinflammation and may have broader implications for developing advanced imaging methods in the future.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this study is to propose and validate a preclinical in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tool to monitor neuroinflammation following ischemic stroke, based on injection of a novel multimodal nanoprobe, NanoGd, specifically designed for internalization by phagocytic cells. First, it is verified that NanoGd is efficiently internalized by microglia in vitro. In vivo MRI coupled with intravenous injection of NanoGd in a permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion mouse model results in hypointense signals in the ischemic lesion. In these mice, longitudinal two-photon intravital microscopy shows NanoGd internalization by activated CX3CR1-GFP/+ cells. Ex vivo analysis, including phase contrast imaging with synchrotron X-ray, histochemistry, and transmission electron microscopy corroborate NanoGd accumulation within the ischemic lesion and uptake by immune phagocytic cells. Taken together, these results confirm the potential of NanoGd-enhanced MRI as an imaging biomarker of neuroinflammation at the subacute stage of ischemic stroke. As far as it is known, this work is the first to decipher the working mechanism of MR signals induced by a nanoparticle passively targeted at phagocytic cells by performing intravital microscopy back-to-back with MRI. Furthermore, using a gadolinium-based rather than an iron-based contrast agent raises future perspectives for the development of molecular imaging with emerging computed tomography technologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8425862PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202101433DOI Listing

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