首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
《Free radical research》2013,47(11-12):1325-1332
Abstract

The loss of paramagnetism of nitroxide radicals due to reductant reactions in biological systems, places a fundamental time constraint on their application as an imaging probe in in vivo EPR imaging studies. However, in vitro studies of the newly synthesized tetraethyl-substituted piperidine nitroxide radical demonstrated high resistivity to paramagnetic reduction when exposed to ascorbic acid, a common reduction agent in biological systems. In this work we investigated the use of these nitroxides as an imaging probe in EPR imaging of small rodents. 2,2,6,6-Tetraethyl-piperidine nitroxide (TEEPONE) is not highly soluble in aqueous media, thus a lipid-based emulsion system of lecithin was used to solubilize TEEPONE. The obtained solution was homogenous and with low viscosity, allowing smooth intravenous injection into mice tail vein. Acquired three dimensional (3D) EPR images of mouse head clearly showed TEEPONE distributed in all tissues including brain tissues, with an average measurable signal half-life of more than 80 min, thus demonstrating high resistivity to reduction due to ascorbic acid in in vivo animal studies, and the potential for use of this compound in in vivo studies of animal model systems.  相似文献   

2.
Free radicals and other paramagnetic species, play an important role in cellular injury and pathophysiology. EPR spectroscopy and imaging has emerged as an important tool for non-invasive in vivo measurement and spatial mapping of free radicals in biological tissues. Extensive applications have been performed in small animals such as mice and recently applications in humans have been performed. Spatial EPR imaging enables 3D mapping of the distribution of a given free radical while spectral-spa-tial EPR imaging enables mapping of the spectral information at each spatial position, and, from the observed line width, the localized tissue oxygenation can be determined. A variety of spatial, and spectral-spatial EPR imaging applications have been performed. These techniques, along with the use of biocompatible paramagnetic probes including particulate suspensions and soluble nitroxide radicals, enable spatial imaging of the redox state and oxygenation in a variety of biomedical applications. With spectral-spatial EPR imaging, oxygenation was mapped within the gastrointestinal (GI) tract of living mice, enabling measurement of the oxygen gradient from the proximal to the distal GI tract. Using spatial EPR imaging, the distribution and metabolism of nitroxide radicals within the major organs of the body of living mice was visualized and anatomically co-registered by proton MRI enabling in vivo mapping of the redox state and radical clearance. EPR imaging techniques have also been applied to non-invasively measure the distribution and metabolism of topically applied nitroxide redox probes in humans, providing information regarding the penetration of the label through the skin and measurement of its redox clearance. Thus, EPR spectroscopy and imaging has provided important information in a variety of applications ranging from small animal models of disease to topical measurement of redox state in humans.  相似文献   

3.
Nitroxide-based electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) imaging agents are useful quantitative probes of O2 concentration in vivo in real time. Lipophilic, labile alkanoyloxymethyl esters of nitroxides can cross the blood-brain barrier, and after hydrolysis, the corresponding anionic nitroxide is intracellularly entrapped at levels sufficient to permit O2 measurements. The utility of nitroxides as EPR imaging agents depends critically on their ability to accumulate in the brain to high levels. In this study, we systematically investigated the relationship between the structure of the alkanoyl moiety and the ability of the corresponding labile ester to deliver nitroxide intracellularly. We demonstrate, in a cultured cell model, that for nitroxide labile esters with unbranched alkanoyl chains, increasing the chain length improves intracellular loading. Moreover, by studying an isomeric series of labile esters, we conclude that branching of the alkanoyl chain drastically reduces intracellular loading. These structural insights improve our general ability to use labile esters to deliver carboxylates intracellularly, and suggest a strategy for enhancing delivery of nitroxide imaging agents across the blood-brain barrier in a living animal.  相似文献   

4.
Free radicals and other paramagnetic species, play an important role in cellular injury and pathophysiology. EPR spectroscopy and imaging has emerged as an important tool for non-invasive in vivo measurement and spatial mapping of free radicals in biological tissues. Extensive applications have been performed in small animals such as mice and recently applications in humans have been performed. Spatial EPR imaging enables 3D mapping of the distribution of a given free radical while spectral-spatial EPR imaging enables mapping of the spectral information at each spatial position, and, from the observed line width, the localized tissue oxygenation can be determined. A variety of spatial, and spectral-spatial EPR imaging applications have been performed. These techniques, along with the use of biocompatible paramagnetic probes including particulate suspensions and soluble nitroxide radicals, enable spatial imaging of the redox state and oxygenation in a variety of biomedical applications. With spectral-spatial EPR imaging, oxygenation was mapped within the gastrointestinal (GI) tract of living mice, enabling measurement of the oxygen gradient from the proximal to the distal GI tract. Using spatial EPR imaging, the distribution and metabolism of nitroxide radicals within the major organs of the body of living mice was visualized and anatomically co-registered by proton MRI enabling in vivo mapping of the redox state and radical clearance. EPR imaging techniques have also been applied to non-invasively measure the distribution and metabolism of topically applied nitroxide redox probes in humans, providing information regarding the penetration of the label through the skin and measurement of its redox clearance. Thus, EPR spectroscopy and imaging has provided important information in a variety of applications ranging from small animal models of disease to topical measurement of redox state in humans.  相似文献   

5.
Electron paramagnetic resonance imaging (EPRI) allows detection and localization of paramagnetic spin probes in vivo and in real time. We have shown that nitroxide spin probes entrapped in the intracellular milieu can be imaged by EPRI. Therefore, with the development of a tumor-targetable vehicle that can efficiently deliver nitroxides into cells, it should be possible to use nitroxide spin probes to label and image cells in a tumor. In this study, we assess the potential of liposomes as a delivery vehicle for imaging probes. We demonstrate that liposomes can stably encapsulate nitroxides at very high concentrations (> 100 mM), at which nitroxides exhibit concentration-dependent quenching of their EPR signal—a process analogous to the quenching of fluorescent molecules. The encapsulating liposomes thus appear spectroscopically “dark”. When the liposomes are endocytosed and degraded by cells, the encapsulated nitroxides are liberated and diluted into the much larger intracellular volume. The consequent relief of quenching generates a robust intracellular nitroxide signal that can be imaged. We show that through endocytosis of nitroxide-loaded liposomes, CV1 cells can achieve intracellular nitroxide concentrations of ∼ 1 mM. By using tissue phantom models, we verify that this concentration is more than sufficient for in vivo EPR imaging.  相似文献   

6.
Nitroxides are a class of stable free radicals that have several biomedical applications including radioprotection and noninvasive assessment of tissue redox status. For both of these applications, it is necessary to understand the in vivo biodistribution and reduction of nitroxides. In this study, magnetic resonance imaging was used to compare tissue accumulation (concentration) and reduction of two commonly studied nitroxides: the piperidine nitroxide Tempol and the pyrrolidine nitroxide 3-CP. It was found that 3-CP was reduced 3 to 11 times slower (depending on the tissue) than Tempol in vivo and that maximum tissue concentration varies substantially between tissues (0.6-7.2mM). For a given tissue, the maximum concentration usually did not vary between the two nitroxides. Furthermore, using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we showed that the nitroxide reduction rate depends only weakly on cellular pO(2) in the oxygen range expected in vivo. These observations, taken with the marked variation in nitroxide reduction rates observed between tissues, suggest that tissue pO(2) is not a major determinant of the nitroxide reduction rate in vivo. For the purpose of redox imaging, 3-CP was shown to be an optimal choice based on the achievable concentrations and bioreduction observed in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, we developed an in vivo temporal electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) imaging technique to be applied to the brain of a rat, into which a blood-brain barrier (BBB)-permeable nitroxide radical, 3-methoxycarbonyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidine-1-oxyl (PCAM) was injected intraperitoneally. This imaging technique made it possible to measure decay rates of a nitroxide radical in multiple regions of the brain simultaneously. Using this technique, the half-life of PCAM was estimated from the exponential decay of the signal intensity derived from the temporal EPR images in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex of rats after a kainic acid (KA)-induced seizure. The hippocampal half-life of PCAM after KA-induced seizures was significantly prolonged (p < .01), whereas the prolongation of the cortical half-life was not significant. These findings suggest that following a KA-seizure, the intrahippocampal ability to reduce the nitroxide radical is impaired, but the ability is intact in the cerebral cortex. This is the first in vivo quantitative EPR imaging study that has a bearing on the pathogenesis of KA-induced seizures in the brain.  相似文献   

8.
Stable nitroxide radicals have been considered as therapeutic antioxidants because they can scavenge more toxic radicals in biologic systems. However, as radicals they also have the potential to increase oxidant stress in cells and tissues. We studied the extent to which this occurs in cultured EA.hy926 endothelial cells exposed to the nitroxide Tempol (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl). Tempol was rapidly reduced by the cells, as manifest by an increase in the ability of the cells to reduce extracellular ferricyanide and by disappearance of the Tempol EPR signal. Cells loaded with ascorbic acid, which directly reacts with Tempol, showed increased rates of Tempol-dependent ferricyanide reduction, and a more rapid loss of the Tempol EPR signal than cells not containing ascorbate. In this process, intracellular ascorbate was oxidized, and was depleted at lower Tempol concentrations than was GSH, another important intracellular low molecular weight antioxidant. Further evidence that Tempol concentrations of 100-1000 μM induced an oxidant stress was that it caused an increase in the oxidation of dihydrofluorescein in cells and inhibited ascorbate transport at concentrations as low as 50-100 μM. The presence of intracellular ascorbate both prevented dihydrofluorescein oxidation and spared GSH from oxidation by Tempol. Such sparing was not observed when GSH was depleted by other mechanisms, indicating that it was likely due to protection against oxidant stress. These results show that whereas Tempol may scavenge other more toxic radicals, care must be taken to ensure that it does not itself induce an oxidant stress, especially with regard to depletion of ascorbic acid.  相似文献   

9.
We report herein on the development of a new photochrome-fluorescence-spin method for the quantitative analysis of the redox status and viscosity of a medium. The method of the viscosity measurement is based on the use of double fluorescence-nitroxide molecules. In such hybrid compounds the nitroxide moiety quenches the fluorescence of the fluorophore (stilbene moiety). The reduction of nitroxide by an antioxidant (ascorbic acid) causes a rise of fluorescence of the fluorophore. The rate constant of the stilbene fragment photoisomerization in such systems is dependent upon the viscosity of the media.The synthesized dual stilbene-nitroxide probe was covalently immobilized onto the surface of a quartz plate as an eventual fiber-optic sensor. The immobilization procedure included a cyanogen bromide surface activation followed by smoothing with a protein tether. The rate of fluorescence change was monitored in aqueous-glycerol solutions of different viscosities and content of ascorbic acid. Good correlation was found: (a) between the concentration of ascorbic acid in the sample and the rate of fluorescence increase due to the reduction of the nitroxide moiety, and (b) between the rate constant of photoisomerization and the viscosity of the media. Appropriate calibration would make the determination of the viscosity of a media possible (in a range 1-500 cP), as well as ascorbate content, in a range (1-9) x 10(-4) M, with fast single measurement.  相似文献   

10.
Although laboratory data clearly suggest a role for oxidants (dioxygen and free radicals derived from dioxygen) in the pathogenesis of many age-related and degenerative diseases (such as arthrosis and arthritis), methods to image such species in vivo are still very limited. This methodological problem limits physiopathologic studies about the role of those species in vivo, the effects of their regulation using various drugs, and the evaluation of their levels for diagnosis of degenerative diseases. In vivo electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) imaging and spectroscopy are unique, noninvasive methods used to specifically detect and quantify paramagnetic species. However, two problems limit their application: the anatomic location of the EPR image in the animal body and the relative instability of the EPR probes. Our aim is to use EPR imaging to obtain physiologic and pathologic information on the mouse knee joint. This article reports the first in vivo EPR image of a small tissue, the mouse knee joint, with good resolution (≈ 160 μm) after intra-articular injection of a triarylmethyl radical EPR probe. It was obtained by combining EPR and x-ray micro-computed tomography for the first time and by taking into account the disappearance kinetics of the EPR probe during image acquisition to reconstruct the image. This multidisciplinary approach opens the way to high-resolution EPR imaging and local metabolism studies of radical species in vivo in different physiologic and pathologic situations.  相似文献   

11.
The development of an injectable probe formulation, consisting of perchlorotriphenylmethyl triester radical dissolved in hexafluorobenzene, for in vivo oximetry and imaging of oxygen concentration in tissues using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) imaging is reported. The probe was evaluated for its oxygen sensitivity, biostability, and distribution in a radiation-induced fibrosarcoma tumor transplanted into C3H mice. Some of the favorable features of the probe are: a single narrow EPR peak (anoxic linewidth, 41 microT), high solubility in hexafluorobenzene (>12 mM), large linewidth sensitivity to molecular oxygen ( approximately 1.8 microT/mmHg), good stability in tumor tissue (half-life: 3.3 h), absence of spin-spin broadening (up to 12 mM), and lack of power saturation effects (up to 200 mW). Three-dimensional spatial and spectral-spatial (spectroscopic) EPR imaging measurements were used to visualize the distribution of the probe, as well as to obtain spatially resolved pO(2) information in the mice tumor subjected to normoxic and hyperoxic treatments. The new probe should enable unique opportunities for measurement of the oxygen concentration in tumors using EPR methods.  相似文献   

12.
Measurement of oxidative stress by EPR radical-probe technique   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
An EPR method for the measurement of the oxidative stress status in biological systems is described. The method is based on the X-band EPR detection of a persistent nitroxide generated under physiological or pseudo-physiological conditions by oxidation of a highly lipophylic hydroxylamine probe. The probe employed is bis(1-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)-decandioate which is administrated as hydrochloride salt. This probe is able to give a fast reaction with the majority of radical species involved in the oxidative stress. Furthermore, it crosses cell membranes and distributes in a biological environment without the need to alter or destroy compartmentation. The method is therefore suitable for quantitative measurements of ROS and can be applied to human tissues in real clinical settings. It has been successfully employed in systems of growing complexity and interest, ranging from subcellular fractions to whole animals and human liver.  相似文献   

13.
A new electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) oximetry probe, based on a naphthalocyanine macrocycle, is reported to exhibit high oxygen sensitivity and favorable EPR characteristics for biological applications. The free radical probe, lithium naphthalocyanine (LiNc), is synthesized as fine microcrystalline powder with particle size less than 1 microm and high spin density. It exhibits a single sharp EPR peak, whose width varies linearly with oxygen partial pressure (pO2). The EPR spectrum is nonsaturable at typical microwave power levels (< 25 mW at X-band). These unique characteristics make this probe ideal for measuring oxygen concentration in biological tissues, in vivo. The peak-to-peak width under anoxic conditions is 0.51 G (at X-band), and it increases linearly with increase in oxygen partial pressure and reaches 26.0 G for 100% oxygen (760 mmHg), showing an oxygen sensitivity of 34 mG/mmHg. The probe responds to changes in pO2 quickly and reproducibly, thus enabling dynamic measurements of regional oxygenation in real time. The application of this probe for oximetry is demonstrated in an in vivo biological system. The changes in pO2 were monitored in the leg muscle tissue of a living mouse breathing room air and carbogen (95% oxygen + 5% CO2), alternatively. The mean pO2 measured with this probe in muscle tissues was consistent with values reported previously using other methods. Overall, the probe shows very desirable characteristics for localized measurements of tissue oxygenation.  相似文献   

14.
This review of the different methodologies used for animal imaging with radioactive compounds presents the most recent approaches developed for both in vitro and in vivo studies. The choice of a detector for analysis of the spatial distribution of radionuclides deposited in biological tissues results in a trade-off between the size and nature of the region to study (in vitro or in vivo), the required spatial resolution and the penetrating characteristics of the ionizing radiation. Real time detectors are now available for quantitative imaging of 2D or 3D radioactive samples and offer either an increased dynamic range or a lowered sensitivity in comparison with film radioautography. For high resolution imaging, two specific techniques are proposed for applications to rodents. The usefulness of self-triggering intensified charge coupled device (STIC) is illustrated for in vitro localization in radiotoxicological studies of alpha-emitters. For in vivo techniques, the performance of positron emission tomography (PET) is discussed, as a promising method of molecular imaging of biological processes.  相似文献   

15.
In vivo imaging in experimental preclinical tumor research--a review.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The multiparametric molecular cell and tissue analysis in vitro and in vivo is characterized by rapid progress in the field of image generation technologies, sensor biotechnology, and computational modeling. Fascinating new potentials in unraveling the detailed functions of single cells, organs, and whole organisms are presently emerging and permit the close monitoring i.e. tumor development or basic cell development processes with an unprecedented multiplicity of promising investigative possibilities. To answer basic questions of in vivo tumor development and progression fluorescence based imaging techniques provide new insights into molecular pathways and targets. Genetic reporter systems (eGFP, DsRED) are available and high sensitive detection systems are on hand. These techniques could be used for in vitro assays and quantified e.g. by microscopy and CCD based readouts. The introduction of novel fluorescent dyes emitting in the near infrared range (NIR) combined with the development of sensitive detector systems and monochromatic powerful NIR-lasers for the first time permits the quantification and imaging of fluorescence and/or bioluminescence in deeper tissues. Laser based techniques particularly in the NIR-range (like two-photon microscopy) offer superb signal to noise ratios, and thus the potential to detect molecular targets in vivo. In combination with flat panel volumetric computed tomography (fpVCT), questions dealing e.g. with tumor size, tumor growth, and angiogenesis/vascularization could be answered noninvasively using the same animal. The resolution of down to 150 microm/each direction can be achieved using fpVCT. It is demonstrated by many groups that submillimeter resolutions can be achieved in small animal imaging at high sensitivity and molecular specificity. Since the resolution in preclinical small animal imaging is down to approximately 10 microm by the use of microCT and to subcellular resolutions using ( approximately 1 microm) microscope based systems, the advances of different techniques can now be combined to "multimodal" preclinical imaging and the possibilities for in vivo intravital cytometry now become within one's reach.  相似文献   

16.
Tetrathiatriarylmethyl radicals are ideal spin probes for biological electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and imaging. The wide application of trityl radicals as biosensors of oxygen or other biological radicals was hampered by the lack of affordable large-scale syntheses. We report the large-scale synthesis of the Finland trityl radical using an improved addition protocol of the aryl lithium monomer to methylchloroformate. A new reaction for the formal one-electron reduction of trityl alcohols to trityl radicals using neat trifluoroacetic acid is reported as well. Initial applications show that the compound is very sensitive to molecular oxygen. It has already provided high-resolution EPR images on large aqueous samples and should be suitable for a broad range of in vivo applications.  相似文献   

17.
Oleic acid-conjugated chitosan (oleyl-chitosan) is a powerful platform for encapsulating oleic acid-decorated iron oxide nanoparticles (ION), resulting in a good magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) probe. Oleyl-chitosan could self-assemble into core-shell structures in aqueous solution and provide the effective core compartment for loading ION. ION-loaded oleyl-chitosan nanoparticles showed good enhanced MRI sensitivity in a MR scanner. Cy5.5 dye was accessed to the oleyl-chitosan conjugate for near-infrared (NIR) in vivo optical imaging. After intravenous injection of ION-loaded Cy5.5-conjugated oleyl-chitosan (ION-Cy5.5-oleyl-chitosan) nanoparticles in tumor-bearing mice, both NIRF and MR imaging showed the detectable signal intensity and enhancement in tumor tissues via enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect. Tumor accumulation of the nanoparticles was confirmed through ex vivo fluorescence images and Prussian blue staining images in tumor tissues. It is concluded that ION-Cy5.5-oleyl-chitosan nanoparticle is highly an effective imaging probe for detecting tumor in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
In vivo spin trapping of radical metabolites has become a promising tool in understanding and predicting toxicities caused by different xenobiotics. However, in biological systems radical adducts can be reduced to electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-silent hydroxylamines. To overcome this difficulty, different procedures for reoxidation of the reduced radical adducts were systematically investigated and some metabolic inhibitors of nitroxide reduction were tested. As a test system, carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), a known hepatotoxic substance, was used. CCl4 is metabolized by liver to .CCl3 and, in the presence of the spin trap phenyl N-t-butylnitrone (PBN), forms the PBN/.CCl3 and PBN/.CO2- radical adducts. These radical adducts were measured in the bile using electron paramagnetic resonance after administration of CCl4 and PBN to the rat. We have shown that these radical adducts were reduced to the corresponding hydroxylamines in vivo, since immediately after the collection of bile only traces of the radical adducts could be detected, but after oxidation by different procedures such as bubbling with oxygen, addition of mild oxidant potassium ferricyanide or autoxidation the EPR spectra intensity increases, indicating that the hydroxylamines had been re-oxidized back to nitroxides. The collection of bile into plastic Eppendorf tubes containing the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) or the enzyme ascorbate oxidase did not increase the intensity of the spectra significantly, demonstrating that neither reduction by reduced glutathione (GSH) nor ascorbic acid occurred ex vivo. However in the presence of NEM faster re-oxidation was observed. A new radical adduct that was not observed previously in any in vivo experiment and which exhibited 13C hyperfine coupling was detected when the rats were injected with 13CCl4. We have proven that this is the same adduct detected previously in vitro in microsomal incubations of CCl4, PBN, GSH, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH). As a general rule, we have shown that a variety of oxidation procedures should be tried to detect the different radical adducts which are otherwise not observable due to the in vivo reduction of radical adducts.  相似文献   

19.
EXPERIMENTAL OBJECTIVES: In vivo imaging of GLP-1 receptor-positive tissues may allow examination of physiologic and pathophysiologic processes. Based on the GLP-1 analog Exendin 4, we have developed a radiolabeled compound specifically targeting the GLP-1 receptor (DTPA-Lys40-Exendin 4). This work aims to detect GLP-1 receptor-positive tissues by biodistribution studies and in vivo small animal imaging studies. For in vivo imaging, a high-resolution multi-pinhole SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) system was used in conjunction with an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) system for image fusion. RESULTS: DTPA-Lys40-Exendin 4 can be labeled with 111In to high specific activity (40 GBq/micromol). The radiochemical purity reliably exceeded 95%. Using this compound for in vivo small animal imaging of rats and mice as well as for biodistribution studies, specific GLP-1 binding sites could be detected in stomach, pancreas, lung, adrenals, and pituitary. Receptor-positive tissues were visualized with a high-resolution SPECT system with a resolution of less than 1 mm. CONCLUSIONS: The new technique using DTPA-Lys40-Exendin 4 allows highly sensitive imaging of GLP-1 receptor-positive tissues in vivo. Therefore, intra-individual follow-up studies of GLP-1 receptor-positive tissue could be conducted in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
The present study shows that hydrophobic and cell-penetrating piperidine-type nitroxide radicals SLENU and TEMPOL, but not hydrophilic and partially penetrating or non-penetrating pyrrolidine-type nitroxides carbamoyl-PROXYL and carboxy-PROXYL, are appropriate contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of cancer, based on its functionality - tissue redox activity. The experiments were conducted on anesthetized mice: healthy and neuroblastoma-bearing in a moderate stage of cancer development. The method is based on the nitroxide redox cycle, coupled with appearance or disappearance of the MRI signal. The half-life (τ(1/2)) of a nitroxide-enhanced MRI signal in the respective tissue was used as a marker to assess tissue redox activity to the nitroxide radical. In the case of SLENU and TEMPOL, there were large differences in the histograms between control and cancer-bearing mice. All tissues (cancer and non-cancer) of cancer-bearing organisms were characterized by a long-lived MRI signal (τ(1/2) > 14 min), indicating a high oxidative activity. The tissues of healthy organisms were characterized by a short-lived MRI signal (τ(1/2) = 1-3 min), indicating a high reducing activity. In the case of carbamoyl-PROXYL and carboxy-PROXYL, there was no difference in the histograms between control and cancer-bearing mice. The data show that the penetration of nitroxide in cells and tissues is obligatory for imaging of cancer, based on its redox activity. The principle of the method is applicable also to biopsy specimens, using MRI or EPR spectroscopy. We provide direct evidence that the nitroxide redox cycle could be used as a sensing platform for functional imaging of different pathologies, based on changes in cellular and tissue redox activity, as in the case of cancer.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号