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Method Article
Early detection of apoptosis may identify at-risk cell populations in a variety of diseases. Here we demonstrate a method to link an early apoptosis-detection protein (Annexin V) to a MRI-detectable iron oxide nanoparticle (SPIO). This method may be extended to other proteins of interest to generate MRI-detectable molecular imaging probes.
Cellular apoptosis is a prominent feature of many diseases, and this programmed cell death typically occurs before clinical manifestations of disease are evident. A means to detect apoptosis in its earliest, reversible stages would afford a pre-clinical 'window' during which preventive or therapeutic measures could be taken to protect the heart from permanent damage. We present herein a simple and robust method to conjugate human Annexin V (ANX), which avidly binds to cells in the earliest, reversible stages of apoptosis, to superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticles, which serve as an MRI-detectable contrast agent. The conjugation method begins with an oxidation of the SPIO nanoparticles, which oxidizes carboxyl groups on the polysaccharide shell of SPIO. Purified ANX protein is then added in the setting of a sodium borate solution to facilitate covalent interaction of ANX with SPIO in a reducing buffer. A final reduction step with sodium borohydride is performed to complete the reduction, and then the reaction is quenched. Unconjugated ANX is removed from the mix by microcentrifuge filtration. The size and purity of the ANX-SPIO product is verified by dynamic light scattering (DLS). This method does not require addition to, or modification of, the polysaccharide SPIO shell, as opposed to cross-linked iron oxide particle conjugation methods or biotin-labeled nanoparticles. As a result, this method represents a simple, robust approach that may be extended to conjugation of other proteins of interest.
Adapted from prior study1.
1. Conjugation of Annexin V to SPIO
2. Dynamic Light Scattering
3. Cell Culture, Induction of Apoptosis in Culture, and MRI of Cultured Cells
4. In Vitro MRI
5. Representative Results
Measurement of T2* signal loss in vitro requires a homogeneous agar phantom and the lack of air bubbles, which will create signal void artifact. This artifact is difficult to distinguish from genuine T2* signal loss of SPIO, and is critical to interpretable results. Please see Figure 1 for an example of an air artifact as well as genuine iron oxide T2* signal loss.
For in vitro culture dish imaging, apply an appropriate volume of agar gel to each culture dish, so that sufficient axial MRI slices, which are approximately 1 mm thick, can be made to adequately image the entire dish. Figure 2 illustrates the expected MRI signal from individual culture plates in agar. There is typically some signal variation at the edges of the plate, so analysis of regions of interest should avoid these uneven areas.
Figure 1. ANX-SPIO detects apoptosis in cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. Figure 1A shows a photo of pelleted neonatal cardiomyocytes treated with control solution (left tube), ANX-SPIO (middle tube), and DOX+ANX-SPIO (right tube). Note the brownish color of the DOX+ANX-SPIO treated cells, reflecting increased retention of the ANX-SPIO compound in apoptotic cells. Figure 1B In vitro MRI images show the intense T2* signal loss of the DOX+ANX-SPIO cells. Also, an air bubble is seen between the 4th and 5th Eppendorf tubes (small black signal void), which is similar to the signal void of ANX-SPIO, and which can affect analysis of CNR.
Figure 2. ANX-SPIO binding is specific for apoptotic cells in culture. Figure 2A demonstrates apoptotic rat neonatal cardiomyocytes on culture dishes, subjected to either ANX-FLUOS staining or ANX-SPIO staining, with low and high concentrations (left and right, respectively) of ANX-SPIO. Note the different T2* signal loss (black signal) of apoptotic cells that were treated with fluorescent ANX (ANX-FLUOS) and low levels versus high levels of ANX-SPIO. The increased T2* signal loss on the right is associated with a markedly reduced ANX-FLUOS signal, which has been competed off by higher ASX-SPIO concentrations. Figure 2B illustrates the competitive binding of ANX-SPIO versus ANX-FLUOS signal and the dissociation constant, Ki. The X-axis denotes the Annexin protein concentration in log scale.
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The described conjugation method for linking SPIO to Annexin V exploits the side chain amine groups of Annexin and the carboxyl moieties of the SPIO nanoparticle. Through specific oxidation-reduction steps, covalent linkage of these compounds can be achieved, and the resulting functionalized nanoparticle can be isolated. This method may be generalized to other proteins and nanoparticles of interest.
The most critical steps are the oxidation and reduction conditions, carried out in the approp...
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No conflicts of interest declared.
National Institutes of Health, NHLBI (RD, PY, PS).
American Heart Association (JL).
Stanford University, VPUE Grant (JL).
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Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Superparamagnetic iron oxide | Ocean Nanotech, Inc. | ICK-40-005 | |
Doxorubicin | Sigma | D1515-10MG | |
SuperMag Separator | Ocean Nanotech, Inc. | N/A | |
Zetasizer Nano DLS machine | Malvern, Inc | N/A |
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