4.7 Article

In vitro MR imaging of regulated gene expression

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 228, Issue 2, Pages 488-492

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2282012006

Keywords

experimental study; genes and genetics; magnetic resonance (MR); molecular analysis

Ask authors/readers for more resources

PURPOSE: To design and evaluate a construct that allows regulated expression of the magnetic. resonance (MR) imaging reporter gene human tyrosinase under control of the tetracycline response element. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) was transfected with a plasmid that codes,for the tetracycline-controlled transactivator and a new construct. In this construct, the-reporter gene human tyrosinase is under control of the tetracycline response element, thus allowing suppression of gene expression by adding doxycycline (tetracycline switched off). A reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction was conducted to evaluate gene expression. Additionally, immunohistochemical investigation of tyrosinase and melanin staining was undertaken to analyze the presence of these molecules. After culture in an iron- and holotrans-ferrin-enriched medium, cells were imaged in a 1.0-T clinical MR imager by using a surface coil and T1-weighted spin-echo and gradient-echo sequences. RESULTS: Two stable transfected cell clones were established. Cells cultured,with doxycycline showed no background expression of the human tyrosinase gene, whereas withdrawal of doxycycline resulted in detectable tyrosinase messenger RNA expression. Gene expression results in a detectable tyrosinase protein level and melanin content. Increased signal intensity on T1-weighted MR images in cells that expressed the reporter gene was observed in comparison to genetically identical cells with the reporter gene switched off. CONCLUSION: Our construct enables MR imaging of regulated tyrosinase gene expression in vitro. (C) RSNA, 2003.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available