Mesoporous Silica-Coated Hollow Manganese Oxide Nanoparticles as Positive <i>T</i><sub>1</sub> Contrast Agents for Labeling and MRI Tracking of Adipose-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Taeho Kim(Seoul National University), Eric Momin(Johns Hopkins University), Jonghoon Choi(Johns Hopkins University), Kristy C. Yuan(Johns Hopkins University), Hasan A. Zaidi(Johns Hopkins University), Jaeyun Kim(Seoul National University), Mihyun Park(Seoul National University), Nohyun Lee(Seoul National University), Michael T. McMahon(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Alfredo Quiñones‐Hinojosa(Johns Hopkins University), Jeff W. M. Bulte(Johns Hopkins University), Taeghwan Hyeon(Seoul National University), Assaf A. Gilad(Kennedy Krieger Institute)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
February 11, 2011
Cited by 504Open Access
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Abstract

Mesoporous silica-coated hollow manganese oxide (HIVInO@ mSiO(2)) nanoparticles were developed as a novel T-1 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent. We hypothesized that the mesoporous structure of the nanopartide shell enables optimal access of water molecules to the magnetic core, and consequently, an effective longitudinal (R-1) relaxation enhancement of water protons, which value was measured to be 0.99 (mM(-1) s(-1)) at 11.7 T. Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) were efficiently labeled using electroporation, with much shorter T-1 values as compared to direct incubation without electroporation, which was also evidenced by signal enhancement on T-1-weighted MR images in vitro. Intracranial grafting of HMnO@mSiO(2)-labeled MSCs enabled serial MR monitoring of cell transplants over 14 days. These novel nanopartides may extend the arsenal of currently available nanoparticie MR contrast agents by providing positive contrast on T-1-weighted images at high magnetic field strengths.


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