MRI detection of single particles for cellular imaging
- Erik M. Shapiro†,‡,
- Stanko Skrtic†,
- Kathryn Sharer†,
- Jonathan M. Hill§,
- Cynthia E. Dunbar§, and
- Alan P. Koretsky†
- †Laboratory of Functional and Molecular Imaging, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and §Hematology Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20892
-
Communicated by Mildred Cohn, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, June 8, 2004 (received for review October 28, 2003)
Abstract
There is rapid growth in the use of MRI for molecular and cellular imaging. Much of this work relies on the high relaxivity
of nanometer-sized, ultrasmall dextran-coated iron oxide particles. Typically, millions of dextran-coated ultrasmall iron
oxide particles must be loaded into cells for efficient detection. Here we show that single, micrometer-sized iron oxide particles
(MPIOs) can be detected by MRI in vitro in agarose samples, in cultured cells, and in mouse embryos. Experiments studying effects of MRI resolution and particle
size from 0.76 to 1.63 μm indicated that
effects can be readily detected from single MPIOs at 50-μm resolution and significant signal effects could be detected at
resolutions as low as 200 μm. Cultured cells were labeled with fluorescent MPIOs such that single particles were present in
individual cells. These single particles in single cells could be detected both by MRI and fluorescence microscopy. Finally,
single particles injected into single-cell-stage mouse embryos could be detected at embryonic day 11.5, demonstrating that
even after many cell divisions, daughter cells still carry individual particles. These results demonstrate that MRI can detect
single particles and indicate that single-particle detection will be useful for cellular imaging.
Footnotes
-
↵ ‡ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: shapiroe{at}ninds.nih.gov.
-
Abbreviations: USPIO, ultrasmall dextran-coated iron oxide particle; MPIO, micrometersized iron oxide particle; TE, echo time; En, embryonic day n.
-
↵ ¶ Lauterbur, P. C., Bernardo, M. L., Jr., Mendonca Dias, M. H. & Heldman, A. W., Proceedings of the Fifth International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine Meeting, Aug. 19–22, 1986, Montreal, QC, Canada, p. 229 (abstr.).





