Publication | Closed Access
Magnetic resonance tracking of nanoparticle labelled neural stem cells in a rat’s spinal cord
45
Citations
16
References
2006
Year
NanoparticlesMagnetic Resonance TrackingEngineeringImaging AgentMagnetic ResonanceBiomedical EngineeringStem Cell BiologyMagnetic Resonance ImagingRegenerative MedicineNanomedicineNeuroregenerationImaging AgentsTherapeutic ImagingBioimagingStem CellsMolecular ImagingRadiologyNeuroimagingNeural Tissue EngineeringContrast AgentCell BiologyNeural Stem CellsMri SignalsBiomedical ImagingResonanceStem Cell ResearchFunctional X-ray ImagingStem-cell TherapyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineNeural Stem Cell
Neural stem cells isolated from an adult rat's spinal cord were loaded with superparamagnetic gold-coated monocrystalline iron oxide nanoparticles (Au-MION) intended for use as contrast enhancers in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A dose-dependent attenuation of MRI signals was observed for Au-MION down to 0.001 µg Fe/µl and for nanoparticle-loaded clusters of only 20 cells. The labelled cells were infused into the spinal cord of anaesthetized rats and tracked by MRI at 1 h, 48 h and 1 month post-injection. Histological analysis revealed that MRI signals correlated well with gold-positive staining of transplanted cells. The present results show that Au-MION exerts powerful contrast-enhancing properties and may represent novel MRI labels for labelling and tracking the transplanted cells in vivo.
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