4.7 Article

Nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) imaging in the human brain at 7 T

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages 114-124

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.03.047

Keywords

CEST; Nuclear Overhauser enhancement; NOE; Relay; Exchange; High field; MRI; Asymmetry analysis; Lorentzian curve fit

Funding

  1. NIH [P41EB015909, P50CA103175, R01EB015032, R01EB009731, R01CA166171]
  2. National Center for Research Resources
  3. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health [P41 EB015909]
  4. Philips Medical Systems

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Chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) is a magnetization transfer (MT) technique to indirectly detect pools of exchangeable protons through the water signal. CEST MRI has focused predominantly on signals from exchangeable protons downfield (higher frequency) from water in the CEST spectrum. Low power radiofrequency (RF) pulses can slowly saturate protons with minimal interference of conventional semisolid based MT contrast (MTC). When doing so, saturation-transfer signals are revealed upfield from water, which is the frequency range of non-exchangeable aliphatic and olefinic protons. The visibility of such signals indicates the presence of a relayed transfer mechanism to the water signal, while their finite width reflects that these signals are likely due to mobile solutes. It is shown here in protein phantoms and the human brain that these signals build up slower than conventional CEST, at a rate typical for intramolecular nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) effects in mobile macromolecules such as proteins/peptides and lipids. These NOE-based saturation transfer signals show a pH dependence, suggesting that this process is the inverse of the well-known exchange-relayed NOEs in high resolution NMR protein studies, thus a relayed-NOE CEST process. When studying 6 normal volunteers with a low-power pulsed CEST approach, the relayed-NOE CEST effect was about twice as large as the CEST effects downfield and larger in white matter than gray matter. This HOE contrast upfield from water provides a way to study mobile macromolecules in tissue. First data on a tumor patient show reduction in both relayed NOE and CEST amide proton signals leading to an increase in magnetization transfer ratio asymmetry, providing insight into previously reported amide proton transfer (APT) effects in tumors. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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