4.8 Article

Photoacoustic Imaging of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Living Mice via Silica-Coated Gold Nanorods

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 5920-5930

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn302042y

Keywords

stem cell therapy; stem cell tracking; photoacoustic imaging; gold nanorod; silica gold nanorod; cell tracking; ultrasound

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [CCNE U54 CA151459]
  2. In Vivo Cancer Molecular Imaging Center [ICMIC P50 CA114747]
  3. Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation
  4. Stanford Molecular Imaging Scholars Program [SMIS R25-T CA118681]
  5. Burroughs Wellcome Fund [1011172]

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Improved imaging modalities are critically needed for optimizing stem cell therapy. Techniques with real-time content to guide and quantitate cell implantation are especially important in applications such as musculoskeletal regenerative medicine. Here, we report the use of silica-coated gold nanorods as a contrast agent for photoacoustic imaging and quantitation of mesenchymal stem cells in rodent muscle tissue. The silica coating increased the uptake of gold into the cell more than 5-fold, yet no toxicity or proliferation changes were observed in cells loaded with this contrast agent. Pluripotency of the cells was retained, and secretome analysis indicated that only IL-6 was disregulated more than 2-fold from a pool of 26 cytokines. The low background of the technique allowed imaging of down to 100 000 cells in vivo. The spatial resolution is 340 mu m, and the temporal resolution is 0.2 s, which is at least an order of magnitude below existing cell imaging approaches. This approach has significant advantages over traditional cell imaging techniques like positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging including real time monitoring of stem cell therapy.

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