Magneto-acoustic protein nanostructures for non-invasive imaging of tissue mechanics in vivo

Measuring cellular and tissue mechanics inside intact living organisms is essential for interrogating the roles of force in physiological and disease processes. Current agents for studying the mechanobiology of intact, living organisms are limited by poor light penetration and material stability. Ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature materials 2024-02, Vol.23 (2), p.290-300
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Whee-Soo, Min, Sungjin, Kim, Su Kyeom, Kang, Sunghwi, An, Soohwan, Criado-Hidalgo, Ernesto, Davis, Hunter, Bar-Zion, Avinoam, Malounda, Dina, Kim, Yu Heun, Lee, Jae-Hyun, Bae, Soo Han, Lee, Jin Gu, Kwak, Minsuk, Cho, Seung-Woo, Shapiro, Mikhail G., Cheon, Jinwoo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Measuring cellular and tissue mechanics inside intact living organisms is essential for interrogating the roles of force in physiological and disease processes. Current agents for studying the mechanobiology of intact, living organisms are limited by poor light penetration and material stability. Magnetomotive ultrasound is an emerging modality for real-time in vivo imaging of tissue mechanics. Nonetheless, it has poor sensitivity and spatiotemporal resolution. Here we describe magneto-gas vesicles (MGVs), protein nanostructures based on gas vesicles and magnetic nanoparticles that produce differential ultrasound signals in response to varying mechanical properties of surrounding tissues. These hybrid nanomaterials significantly improve signal strength and detection sensitivity. Furthermore, MGVs enable non-invasive, long-term and quantitative measurements of mechanical properties within three-dimensional tissues and in vivo fibrosis models. Using MGVs as novel contrast agents, we demonstrate their potential for non-invasive imaging of tissue elasticity, offering insights into mechanobiology and its application to disease diagnosis and treatment. Magneto-gas vesicles, protein nanostructures with enhanced ultrasound signal and sensitivity, enable the non-invasive, long-term and quantitative monitoring of the mechanics of three-dimensional tissues and animals.
ISSN:1476-1122
1476-4660
DOI:10.1038/s41563-023-01688-w