4.4 Review

The relayed nuclear Overhauser effect in magnetization transfer and chemical exchange saturation transfer MRI

Journal

NMR IN BIOMEDICINE
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/nbm.4778

Keywords

chemical exchange saturation transfer; dipolar cross relaxation; magnetization transfer contrast; molecular binding; molecular imaging; nuclear Overhauser effect; signal enhancement; Z-spectrum

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Magnetic resonance is a noninvasive technology with low signal sensitivity for detecting molecular species in vivo. Saturation transfer MRI methods enhance sensitivity by indirectly detecting low-concentration molecules using the water proton pool. The use of rNOE signals from mobile macromolecules allows for the probing of macromolecular solution components and the study of small substrate binding.
Magnetic resonance (MR) is a powerful technique for noninvasively probing molecular species in vivo but suffers from low signal sensitivity. Saturation transfer (ST) MRI approaches, including chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) and conventional magnetization transfer contrast (MTC), allow imaging of low-concentration molecular components with enhanced sensitivity using indirect detection via the abundant water proton pool. Several recent studies have shown the utility of chemical exchange relayed nuclear Overhauser effect (rNOE) contrast originating from nonexchangeable carbon-bound protons in mobile macromolecules in solution. In this review, we describe the mechanisms leading to the occurrence of rNOE-based signals in the water saturation spectrum (Z-spectrum), including those from mobile and immobile molecular sources and from molecular binding. While it is becoming clear that MTC is mainly an rNOE-based signal, we continue to use the classical MTC nomenclature to separate it from the rNOE signals of mobile macromolecules, which we will refer to as rNOEs. Some emerging applications of the use of rNOEs for probing macromolecular solution components such as proteins and carbohydrates in vivo or studying the binding of small substrates are discussed.

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