4.7 Article

Noninvasive Immunometabolic Cardiac Inflammation Imaging Using Hyperpolarized Magnetic Resonance

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 122, Issue 8, Pages 1084-+

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.117.312535

Keywords

animals; cell line; magnetic resonance imaging; monocytes; myocardial infarction

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence (Oxford)
  2. National Institute for Health Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre Programme
  3. British Heart Foundation Fellowship [FS/10/002/28078, FS/14/17/30634]
  4. British Heart Foundation [RG/11/9/28921]
  5. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/M508111/1]
  6. British Heart Foundation Oxbridge Centre for Regenerative Medicine (Oxford)
  7. Tripartite Immunometabolism Consortium-Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF15CC0018486]
  8. British Heart Foundation Oxbridge Centre for Regenerative Medicine
  9. British Heart Foundation [FS/10/002/28078, FS/17/18/32449, FS/14/17/30634, RG/11/9/28921, PG/13/34/30216] Funding Source: researchfish
  10. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [1104935] Funding Source: researchfish
  11. Medical Research Council [G0601490] Funding Source: researchfish
  12. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF15SA0018486] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. MRC [G0601490] Funding Source: UKRI

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Rationale: Current cardiovascular clinical imaging techniques offer only limited assessment of innate immune cell-driven inflammation, which is a potential therapeutic target in myocardial infarction (MI) and other diseases. Hyperpolarized magnetic resonance (MR) is an emerging imaging technology that generates contrast agents with 10- to 20 000-fold improvements in MR signal, enabling cardiac metabolite mapping. Objective: To determine whether hyperpolarized MR using [1-C-13] pyruvate can assess the local cardiac inflammatory response after MI. Methods and Results: We performed hyperpolarized [1-C-13] pyruvate MR studies in small and large animal models of MI and in macrophage-like cell lines and measured the resulting [1-C-13] lactate signals. MI caused intense [1-C-13] lactate signal in healing myocardial segments at both day 3 and 7 after rodent MI, which was normalized at both time points after monocyte/ macrophage depletion. A near-identical [1-C-13] lactate signature was also seen at day 7 after experimental MI in pigs. Hyperpolarized [1-C-13] pyruvate MR spectroscopy in macrophage-like cell suspensions demonstrated that macrophage activation and polarization with lipopolysaccharide almost doubled hyperpolarized lactate label flux rates in vitro; blockade of glycolysis with 2-deoxyglucose in activated cells normalized lactate label flux rates and markedly inhibited the production of key proinflammatory cytokines. Systemic administration of 2-deoxyglucose after rodent MI normalized the hyperpolarized [1-C-13] lactate signal in healing myocardial segments at day 3 and also caused dose-dependent improvement in IL (interleukin)-1 beta expression in infarct tissue without impairing the production of key reparative cytokines. Cine MRI demonstrated improvements in systolic function in 2-DG (2-deoxyglucose)-treated rats at 3 months. Conclusions: Hyperpolarized MR using [1-C-13] pyruvate provides a novel method for the assessment of innate immune cell-driven inflammation in the heart after MI, with broad potential applicability across other cardiovascular disease states and suitability for early clinical translation.

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