Abstract

Occlusion of the major cerebral artery usually results in brain hypoxic-ischemic injury, which evokes neuroinflammation and microglial activation. Activated microglia are considered a source of multiple neurotoxic factors, such as reactive oxygen species (ROS), in the central nervous system (CNS). We herein present a 3D-rendering brain imaging technique in an experimental rodent model of cerebral ischemia based on 2D magnetic images of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) using the planar frequency mixing magnetic detection (p-FMMD) technique. A rat model of cerebral ischemia was established by unilateral middle cerebral artery occlusion with reperfusion (MCAO/R) injury. 2,3,5-Triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) staining was performed to demonstrate the irreversibly damaged ischemic brain tissues, and double immunofluorescent labeling of OX6 (activated microglial marker) and ethidium (ROS marker) was conducted to confirm ROS generation in the activated microglia in the infarcted brain region. The ischemic brain sections treated with OX6-conjugated SPIONs were scanned using our p-FMMD system, yielding 2D images on the basis of the nonlinear magnetic characteristics inherent in SPIONs. The p-FMMD signal images representing microglia activation show an infarct ratio of 44.6 ± 7.1% compared to the contralateral counterpart, which is smaller than observed by TTC (60.9 ± 4.9%) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI, 65.7 ± 2.7%). Furthermore, we developed a 3D-rendering brain imaging process based on the 2D p-FMMD signal images. The 3D reconstructed model showed a decreased ratio of coincidence of the ischemic regions compared with MRI models. In this study, we successfully conducted a feasibility test on whether our p-FMMD technology, a technique for signaling and imaging based on the nonlinearity of SPIONs, can be used to visualize the ischemic brain region in real time by detecting activated microglia in an MCAO/R animal model. Therefore, our method might allow for a different approach to analyze the pathophysiology of ischemic stroke through molecular imaging. Furthermore, we propose that this magnetic particle imaging (MPI) technique that detects the nonlinear magnetization properties of SPIONs could be applied not only to a stroke model but also to various types of pathophysiological studies as a new bioimaging tool.

Highlights

  • Imaging techniques for analyzing and visualizing tissue biospecimens are important in the field of biological research and clinical diagnosis

  • We demonstrated that our planar frequency mixing magnetic detection (p-FMMD) system could detect microglial activation that represents the infarction area in brain tissue specimens of a cerebral ischemia animal model in real time

  • The activated microglia distribution in ischemic brain tissue is what we truly visualized, microglial activation generally occurs in brain infarction regions, we considered this area as an infarction area despite the imperfect spatial coincidence between the “infarct” detected by p-FMMD, triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

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Summary

Introduction

Imaging techniques for analyzing and visualizing tissue biospecimens are important in the field of biological research and clinical diagnosis. MPI technology is a novel medical imaging technique based on the nonlinear magnetization properties of SPIONs when placed under external AC magnetic fields. Our previous research showed the feasibility of 2D MNP imaging of microchannel platforms with our planar frequency mixing magnetic detection (p-FMMD) technique[16]. We built a 3D-rendering brain image based on 2D SPION images obtained from our p-FMMD system and compared it with an image from 3D magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These results demonstrate that our p-FMMD system can successfully visualize the SPIONs embedded in the tissue sections, showing the feasibility of this method as a novel in situ imaging tool for various biological specimens

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