In-Cell Determination of Lactate Dehydrogenase Activity in a Luminal Breast Cancer Model – ex vivo Investigation of Excised Xenograft Tumor Slices Using dDNP Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Chemicals
2.2. Animals
2.3. Surgical Procedure and Slice Preparation
2.4. Perfusion Media and the Perfusion System
2.5. Spin Polarization and Dissolution
2.6. Experimental Design: Hyperpolarized Media Injection and Acquisition Approach
- (1)
- Manual bolus injection during perfusion arrest and non-selective RF pulses: This is the most common hyperpolarized medium administration method and data acquisition approach in dDNP studies carried out in NMR tubes [27,29,30,51,52,54]. In this approach, the hyperpolarized solution was manually transferred via a manifold (connected to the in-flow line and made of a combination of medical grade 3-way valves and syringes) from the conical tube directly to the bottom of the NMR tube containing the tumor slices as previously described [52]. Altogether, the duration of hyperpolarized media transfer in this system was completed within 15 s from the start of the dissolution process. The hyperpolarized medium was injected gently to minimize tissue displacement and care was taken to avoid the introduction of air bubbles that could interfere with magnetic field homogeneity (due to the large difference in magnetic susceptibility between air and water). In this setup, the perfusion was stopped ~30 s before the injection of the hyperpolarized solution and was resumed only after the acquisition of the hyperpolarized spectra was completed (maximum of 4 min). This was done in order to characterize the metabolism of a constant concentration of [1-13C]pyruvate without the effects of wash-in and wash-out of the hyperpolarized medium.
- (2)
- Manual bolus injection during perfusion arrest and selective RF pulses: here, the introduction of the hyperpolarized solution was the same as in approach 1. However, the acquisition was performed using hyperpolarized product-selective saturating RF excitations, termed hereafter selective excitations, which fully excited the metabolite of interest while the precursor (pyruvate) is excited to a much lower degree. Therefore, only newly synthetized metabolites were detected in the consecutive excitation (see the Supplementary Materials). A series of at least 4 such selective excitations was performed immediately after the end of the bolus injection with a repetition time of 1 to 5 s. This was done to quench the signals from [1-13C]pyruvate impurities that resonate close to the metabolite signals [56]. Then, the same pulses were applied with a repetition time of 8 to 16 s to record the metabolism.
- (3)
- Administration of the hyperpolarized medium in a continuous flow and selective RF pulses: in this approach, the hyperpolarized agent was introduced to the tissue via a bypass system. This involved combining the 4 mL of dissolution medium with 8 mL of heated and oxygenated phosphate buffer awaiting in the conical tube used for hyperpolarized media collection (described above). Then, these 12 mL of hyperpolarized medium were loaded into a heated extension tube (bypass line) connected to the perfusion system with a manifold made out of medical grade 3-way valves. Then, the content of the bypass line (12 mL) was infused into the NMR tube containing the slices at a rate of 4 mL/min using the perfusion system. The purpose of the bypass system was to ensure continuous delivery of well-oxygenated hyperpolarized medium throughout the metabolic investigation. An additional benefit of this perfusion system was avoiding turbulence and tissue movement that could be caused by the bolus injection. In this approach, acquisition was started following the loading of the hyperpolarized medium into the bypass line (prior to arrival of the hyperpolarized medium to the slices).
2.7. NMR Spectroscopy
2.7.1. 13C-NMR Acquisitions with Non-selective RF Pulses
2.7.2. 13C-NMR Acquisitions with Selective RF Pulses
2.7.3. 31P-NMR Spectroscopy
2.7.4. Alternating 31P- and 13C-NMR Acquisitions
2.8. Validation of Viability
2.9. Processing and Data Analysis
2.9.1. Software
2.9.2. Determination of [1-13C]pyruvate T1 and Utilization of This Value
2.9.3. T1 Correction of the Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate Signal and Characterization of [1-13C]pyruvate Concentration in the Medium
2.9.4. ATP Concentration
2.9.5. Metabolic Rate Calculation
3. Results
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Adler-Levy, Y.; Nardi-Schreiber, A.; Harris, T.; Shaul, D.; Uppala, S.; Sapir, G.; Lev-Cohain, N.; Sosna, J.; Goldberg, S.N.; Gomori, J.M.; et al. In-Cell Determination of Lactate Dehydrogenase Activity in a Luminal Breast Cancer Model – ex vivo Investigation of Excised Xenograft Tumor Slices Using dDNP Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate. Sensors 2019, 19, 2089. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19092089
Adler-Levy Y, Nardi-Schreiber A, Harris T, Shaul D, Uppala S, Sapir G, Lev-Cohain N, Sosna J, Goldberg SN, Gomori JM, et al. In-Cell Determination of Lactate Dehydrogenase Activity in a Luminal Breast Cancer Model – ex vivo Investigation of Excised Xenograft Tumor Slices Using dDNP Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate. Sensors. 2019; 19(9):2089. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19092089
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdler-Levy, Yael, Atara Nardi-Schreiber, Talia Harris, David Shaul, Sivaranjan Uppala, Gal Sapir, Naama Lev-Cohain, Jacob Sosna, Shraga Nahum Goldberg, J. Moshe Gomori, and et al. 2019. "In-Cell Determination of Lactate Dehydrogenase Activity in a Luminal Breast Cancer Model – ex vivo Investigation of Excised Xenograft Tumor Slices Using dDNP Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate" Sensors 19, no. 9: 2089. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19092089