Measuring Dynamic Changes in the Labile Iron Pool in Vivo with a Reactivity-Based Probe for Positron Emission Tomography

Ryan K. Muir(University of California, San Francisco), Ning Zhao(University of California, San Francisco), Junnian Wei(University of California, San Francisco), Yung-Hua Wang(University of California, San Francisco), Anna Moroz(University of California, San Francisco), Yangjie Huang(University of California, San Francisco), Ying-Chu Chen(University of California, San Francisco), Renuka Sriram(University of California, San Francisco), John Kurhanewicz(University of California, San Francisco), Davide Ruggero(University of California, San Francisco), Adam R. Renslo(University of California, San Francisco), Michael J. Evans(University of California, San Francisco)
ACS Central Science
April 3, 2019
Cited by 45Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Redox cycling of iron powers various enzyme functions crucial for life, making the study of iron acquisition, storage, and disposition in the whole organism a worthy topic of inquiry. However, despite its important role in biology and disease, imaging iron in animals with oxidation-state specificity remains an outstanding problem in biology and medicine. Here we report a first-generation reactivity-based probe of labile ferrous iron suitable for positron emission tomography studies in live animals. The responses of this reagent to systemic changes in labile iron disposition were revealed using iron supplementation and sequestration treatments in mice, while the potential of this approach for in vivo imaging of cancer was demonstrated using genetically and pathologically diverse mouse models, including spontaneous tumors arising in a genetically engineered model of prostate cancer driven by loss of PTEN.


Related Papers