4.7 Article

Catheter-based in vivo imaging of enzyme activity and gene expression: Feasibility study in mice

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 231, Issue 3, Pages 659-666

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2313030831

Keywords

animals; catheters and catheterization, technology; enzymes; experimental study; genes and genetics

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R24 CA 92782, P50 CA 86355] Funding Source: Medline

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PURPOSE: To construct and evaluate an interventional catheter-based imaging system for intravital monitoring of molecularly sensitive near-infrared fluorescent probes and optical marker genes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An imaging device that was based on a miniaturized fiberoptic sensor (MIFS) was built in which images created with a 2.7-F fiberoptic catheter were relayed through a dichroic mirror, through a bandpass filter, and on two independent cameras. This system permitted simultaneous recording of white-light and fluorescent images. Spatial resolution, spectral transmissions, and sensitivity were determined in vitro. In vivo testing was performed in nude mice bearing intraperitoneal tumors that express green fluorescent protein and in a mouse model of ovarian carcinoma with enzyme-activatable near-infrared probes sensitive to tumoral protease activity. Signal intensity on images of tumors and that on images of normal tissue were measured and compared with t test. which was advanced through an 18-gauge sheath, RESULTS: The catheter, showed resolution of 7 line pairs per millimeter and detection limit for fluorochrome CyS.S of 1-10 pmol. Detection of endogeneous green fluorescent protein gene expression was feasible in tumor nodules smaller than I mm in diameter (mean tumor signal intensity, 153.26 +/- 26.45 [SD], compared with that of adjacent nontumoral tissue of 36.73 +/- 11.69; P < .008). Similarly, activation of the near-infrared probe by tumoral proteases could be detected in peritoneal tumor seeds of ovarian cancer model with mean tumor signal intensity of 246.33 +/- 7.77 compared with that of adjacent nontumoral tissue of 41.56 +/- 18.64 (P < .001). Mean contrast-to-noise ratio in the near-infrared channel exceeded white-light contrasts-to-noise ratio by a factor of 6.7 (P < .02). CONCLUSION: With this system, in vivo MIFS imaging of gene expression, enzyme activity, and potentially other molecular events is feasible, through direct interventional access, to several organs and body cavities and potentially through transvascular approaches. (C) RSNA, 2004.

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