학술논문

Molecular magnetic resonance imaging of liver inflammation using an oxidatively activated probe
Document Type
article
Source
JHEP Reports, Vol 5, Iss 10, Pp 100850- (2023)
Subject
Drug-induced liver injury
Steatohepatitis
Reactive oxygen species
Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology
RC799-869
Language
English
ISSN
2589-5559
Abstract
Background & Aims: Many liver diseases are driven by inflammation, but imaging to non-invasively diagnose and quantify liver inflammation has been underdeveloped. The inflammatory liver microenvironment is aberrantly oxidising owing in part to reactive oxygen species generated by myeloid leucocytes. We hypothesised that magnetic resonance imaging using the oxidatively activated probe Fe-PyC3A will provide a non-invasive biomarker of liver inflammation. Methods: A mouse model of drug-induced liver injury was generated through intraperitoneal injection of a hepatoxic dose of acetaminophen. A mouse model of steatohepatitis was generated via a choline-deficient, l-amino acid defined high-fat diet (CDAHFD). Images were acquired dynamically before and after intravenous injection of Fe-PyC3A. The contrast agent gadoterate meglumine was used as a non-oxidatively activated negative control probe in mice fed CDAHFD. The (post-pre) Fe-PyC3A injection change in liver vs. muscle contrast-to-noise ratio (ΔCNR) recorded 2 min post-injection was correlated with liver function test values, histologic scoring assigned using the NASH Clinical Research Network criteria, and intrahepatic myeloid leucocyte composition determined by flow cytometry. Results: For mice receiving i.p. injections of acetaminophen, intrahepatic neutrophil composition correlated poorly with liver test values but positively and significantly with ΔCNR (r = 0.64, p