4.8 Article

Toward in vivo detection of hydrogen peroxide with ultrasound molecular imaging

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 35, Pages 8918-8924

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2013.06.055

Keywords

Ultrasound; Nanotechnology; Hydrogen peroxide; Molecular imaging; Abscess

Funding

  1. EO [T32-EB005970]
  2. Government of Catalonia
  3. ICMIC [P50 CA128346]
  4. NSF [CBET 0853375]

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We present a new class of ultrasound molecular imaging agents that extend upon the design of micromotors that are designed to move through fluids by catalyzing hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and propelling forward by escaping oxygen microbubbles. Micromotor converters require 62 mm of H2O2 to move - 1000-fold higher than is expected in vivo. Here, we aim to prove that ultrasound can detect the expelled microbubbles, to determine the minimum H2O2 concentration needed for microbubble detection, explore alternate designs to detect the H2O2 produced by activated neutrophils and perform preliminary in vivo testing. Oxygen microbubbles were detected by ultrasound at 2.5 mm H2O2. Best results were achieved with a 400-500 nm spherical design with alternating surface coatings of catalase and PSS over a silica core. The lowest detection limit of 10-100 mu M was achieved when assays were done in plasma. Using this design, we detected the H2O2 produced by freshly isolated PMA-activated neutrophils allowing their distinction from naive neutrophils. Finally, we were also able to show that direct injection of these nanospheres into an abscess in vivo enhanced ultrasound signal only when they contained catalase, and only when injected into an abscess, likely because of the elevated levels of H2O2 produced by inflammatory mediators. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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