Harmonic imaging for nonlinear detection of acoustic biomolecules.

IF 6.6 3区 医学 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL APL Bioengineering Pub Date : 2024-11-12 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1063/5.0214306
Rohit Nayak, Mengtong Duan, Bill Ling, Zhiyang Jin, Dina Malounda, Mikhail G Shapiro
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Abstract

Gas vesicles (GVs) based on acoustic reporter genes have emerged as potent contrast agents for cellular and molecular ultrasound imaging. These air-filled, genetically encoded protein nanostructures can be expressed in a variety of cell types in vivo to visualize cell location and activity or injected systemically to label and monitor tissue function. Distinguishing GV signal from tissue deep inside intact organisms requires imaging approaches such as amplitude modulation (AM) or collapse-based pulse sequences. However, these approaches have limitations either in sensitivity or require the destruction of GVs, restricting the imaging of dynamic cellular processes. To address these limitations, we developed harmonic imaging to enhance the sensitivity of nondestructive GV imaging. We hypothesized that harmonic imaging, integrated with AM, could significantly elevate GV detection sensitivity by leveraging the nonlinear acoustic response of GVs. We tested this hypothesis by imaging tissue-mimicking phantoms embedded with purified GVs, mammalian cells genetically modified to express GVs, and mice liver in vivo post-systemic infusion of GVs. Our findings reveal that harmonic cross-propagating wave AM (HxAM) imaging markedly surpasses traditional xAM in isolating GVs' nonlinear acoustic signature, demonstrating significant (p < 0.05) enhancements in imaging performance. HxAM imaging improves detection of GV producing cells up to three folds in vitro, enhances in vivo imaging performance by over 10 dB, while extending imaging depth by up to 20%. Investigation into the backscattered spectra further elucidates the advantages of harmonic imaging. These advancements bolster ultrasound's capability in molecular and cellular imaging, underscoring the potential of harmonic signals to improve GV detection.

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用于声学生物分子非线性检测的谐波成像。
基于声学报告基因的气囊(GVs)已成为细胞和分子超声成像的有效对比剂。这些充满空气的基因编码蛋白质纳米结构可在体内多种细胞类型中表达,以观察细胞位置和活动,或通过系统注射来标记和监测组织功能。要从完整生物体深层组织中区分龙胆紫信号,需要采用振幅调制(AM)或基于塌缩的脉冲序列等成像方法。然而,这些方法要么灵敏度有限,要么需要破坏龙胆紫,从而限制了对动态细胞过程的成像。为了解决这些局限性,我们开发了谐波成像技术来提高无损 GV 成像的灵敏度。我们假设,谐波成像与 AM 相结合,可以利用龙胆紫的非线性声学响应,显著提高龙胆紫检测灵敏度。我们通过对嵌入纯化龙胆紫的组织模拟模型、经基因修饰以表达龙胆紫的哺乳动物细胞以及体内系统灌注龙胆紫后的小鼠肝脏进行成像,对这一假设进行了验证。我们的研究结果表明,谐波交叉传播调幅(HxAM)成像在分离 GVs 非线性声学特征方面明显优于传统的 xAM,在体外显示出显著的 (p),在体内成像性能增强了 10 分贝以上,同时成像深度扩展了 20%。对背向散射光谱的研究进一步阐明了谐波成像的优势。这些进步增强了超声在分子和细胞成像方面的能力,凸显了谐波信号在改进龙胆紫检测方面的潜力。
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来源期刊
APL Bioengineering
APL Bioengineering ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL-
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
6.70%
发文量
39
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: APL Bioengineering is devoted to research at the intersection of biology, physics, and engineering. The journal publishes high-impact manuscripts specific to the understanding and advancement of physics and engineering of biological systems. APL Bioengineering is the new home for the bioengineering and biomedical research communities. APL Bioengineering publishes original research articles, reviews, and perspectives. Topical coverage includes: -Biofabrication and Bioprinting -Biomedical Materials, Sensors, and Imaging -Engineered Living Systems -Cell and Tissue Engineering -Regenerative Medicine -Molecular, Cell, and Tissue Biomechanics -Systems Biology and Computational Biology
期刊最新文献
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