4.8 Article

Magneto-Optical Nanoparticles for Cyclic Magnetomotive Photoacoustic Imaging

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 1964-1976

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn5069258

Keywords

nanoparticles; photoacoustic imaging; magnetic; near-infrared; cancer; diagnosis; multifunctional; polypyrrole

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 CA170734, U19 ES019545, R01 EB016034]
  2. Washington Life Sciences Discovery Fund [3292512]
  3. Department of Bioengineering at the University of Washington

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Photoacoustic imaging has emerged as a highly promising tool to visualize molecular events with deep tissue penetration. Like most other modalities, however, image contrast under in vivo conditions is far from optimal due to background signals from tissue. Using iron oxide-gold core-shell nanoparticles, we have previously demonstrated the concept of magnetomotive photoacoustic (mmPA) imaging, which is capable of dramatically reducing the influence of background signals and producing high-contrast molecular images. Here, we report two significant advances toward clinical translation of this technology. First, we introduce a new class of compact, uniform, magneto-optically coupled core-shell nanoparticles, prepared through localized copolymerization of polypyrrole (PPy) on an iron oxide nanoparticle surface. The resulting iron oxide-PPy nanoparticles feature high colloidal stability and solve the photoinstability and small-scale synthesis problems previously encountered by the gold coating approach. In parallel, we have developed a new generation of mmPA featuring cyclic magnetic motion and ultrasound speckle tracking (USST), whose imaging capture frame rate is several hundred times faster than the photoacoustic speckle tracking (PAST) method we demonstrated previously. These advances enable robust artifact elimination caused by physiologic motions and demonstrate the application of the mmPA technology for in vivo sensitive tumor imaging.

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