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Photoacoustic imaging is an emerging noninvasive imaging modality and has been shown to be a promising tool for visualizing tissue structures and functions by means of laser-induced ultrasound.1, 2 Structures with high optical absorption, such as blood vessels in the visible spectral region, can be imaged with ultrasound resolution, which is not limited by the strong optical scattering in biological tissues. Recently, an in-vivo backward-mode confocal photoacoustic microscope (PAM) with dark-field illumination was invented to image microvasculatures in the skin.3, 4, 5 This system offers high lateral resolution ( at the focal point), high axial resolution , and is capable of imaging optical absorption contrast as deeply as . It shows great potential for applications in dermatology and related cancer research. Contrast-agent-enhanced optical imaging techniques possess high sensitivity and specificity. In this study, we use gold nanoshells (AuroShell™ Particles, Nanospectra Biosciences, Incorporated, Houston, Texas) as a contrast agent for photoacoustic microscopy of tumors. Gold nanoshells have been applied to photothermal therapy of subcutaneous murine tumors6 and have also been used as a contrast agent for in-vivo brain imaging with photoacoustic tomography, enhancing contrast of cortex vessels in rat brain.7 Gold nanoshells are a new type of optically tunable nanoparticles, composed of silica cores ( in diameter) coated with an ultrathin gold shell .8 By adjusting the core size relative to the thickness of the gold shell, the optical properties of nanoshells can be varied across a broad range of the electromagnetic spectrum that spans the visible and infrared regions. In our cancer applications, gold nanoshells are designed to absorb light at near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. The peak optical absorption of nanoshells in this study is at a wavelength of that corresponds to optimal penetration into scattering biological tissues, and is the isosbestic point of the molar extinction spectra of oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin, thus reducing the effect of blood oxygenation variations on photoacoustic signals.7 Nanoshells tend to preferentially extravasate from leaky tumor vasculatures and accumulate in tumors—a preferential, size- and shape-dependent accumulation—via the enhanced permeability and retention effect due to their nanoscale size (i.e., passive targeting).9, 10, 11 The end result of nanoshell accumulation is greatly enhanced NIR optical absorption contrast in the vicinity of tumor vasculatures. In addition, the gold nanoshells used in this study were coated with polyethylene glycol (PEG) to increase their circulation time in the blood stream. The PEGylated nanoshells were measured to have a half-life of in the blood stream of immunocompetent BALB/c mice.7 In this study, the PAM was used to noninvasively image the progressive extravasation of gold nanoshells through solid tumor vasculature in vivo. High resolution and high contrast 3-D gold nanoshell distribution at the solid tumor foci was imaged for . This technology allows us to monitor the dynamics of nanoshells in the solid tumor without any invasive biological modification such as the use of a dorsal skin-fold window chamber.9 Figure 1 shows the experimental setup of a photoacoustic microscope for in-vivo imaging of nanoshell extravasation in solid tumors. A tunable Ti:sapphire laser (LT-2211A, Lotis TII) pumped by a Nd:YAG laser (LS-2137/2, Lotis TII) was employed to provide pulses with a pulse width of , a pulse repetition rate of , and a wavelength of , the peak optical absorption wavelength of the nanoshells used in this study. The laser energy was delivered by a multimode fiber with a diameter. The fiber tip was coaxially positioned on a 3-D precision mechanical scanner. An axicon and a mirror were used to form dark-field illumination and make the light confocal with a focused ultrasonic transducer (V214-BC-RM, Panametrics), whose fractional bandwidth is 70%. The incident energy density on the sample surface was controlled to , which is well within the ANSI standards. A homemade concave lens provided this transducer with a numerical aperture of 0.44 and a focal length of , offering a lateral resolution of and an axial resolution of . The lens was ground from the permanent fused-silica delay line attached to the transducer. The transducer was immersed in a water tank, which had a hole at the bottom sealed with a piece of polyethylene membrane. The imaged part of the animal (e.g., the head of the mouse) was coated with a thin layer of ultrasonic gel and then placed below the membrane. The photoacoustic signals received by the ultrasonic transducer were amplified and recorded by a digital oscilloscope (TDS 5034B, Tektronix) at a sampling rate. Note that the photoacoustic images shown were taken without signal averaging, and the brightness of the images represents the amplitude of the detected photoacoustic signals. Immunocompetent BALB/c mice weighing about were used for the in-vivo experiments. All of the experimental animal procedures were approved by the University Laboratory Animal Care Committee of Texas A&M University. The mice were inoculated with CT26.wt murine colon carcinoma cells subcutaneously on the heads. The mouse head was a good model for long-term immobilization required in our experiments. Imaging was performed after tumor inoculation and under isoflurane gas anesthesia with a dose of 1% in pure oxygen at a flow rate. We maintained the temperature of the imaged tumor region at by controlling the temperature of the water in the tank.9, 12 The body temperature of the animal was maintained by using a water heating pad and a lamp; the pulse rate and arterial blood oxygenation were monitored using a pulse oximeter (model 8600, Nonin Medical, Incorporated) clamped on the back paw. A prescan prior to nanoshell administration was performed to determine the background signal. PEGylated nanoshells with a peak optical absorption at were then intravenously administered. The nanoshell dose was about body weight ( blood). At this concentration, the absorption coefficient due to nanoshells is at . In comparison, the absorption coefficient of whole blood at is . After injection, the 3-D nanoshell distribution at the tumor foci was monitored by PAM for . After imaging, the mice were sacrificed using pentobarbital overdose ( , IP). The imaged tumor and surrounding tissue were excised and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (HE) for histology. PAM measurements illustrate the passive uptake of nanoshells at the inoculated tumor foci. Figures 2a, 2c, 2e, 2g are maximum-amplitude-projected (MAP) images taken prior to and at 1.4, 3, and postnanoshell injection, respectively. In the MAP images, the maximum value of the photoacoustic signal of each A-line along the depth direction versus the 2-D transducer position is plotted. The images are shown on the same grayscale. It is shown in Fig. 2a that without nanoshell injection, the intrinsic blood absorption contrast is relatively low. The nanoshells increase the signal amplitudes from blood vessels by a factor of 2, thus, enhancing the contrast of blood vessels. With the help of nanoshells, Figs. 2c, 2e, 2g show the feeding vessels and accumulated nanoshells at tumor foci well. The nanoshell accumulation gradually delineates the tumor contour and position, which cannot be visualized without nanoshells. Figures 2b, 2d, 2f, 2h show the B-scan images, of which the scanning position corresponds to the white dashed line in Fig. 2c, and are acquired before and at 1.4, 3, and after nanoshell injection, respectively. The images are shown on the same grayscale. The brightness represents the photoacoustic pressure amplitude detected by the transducer. In the B-scan images, the vertical axis is the depth and the horizontal axis is the lateral scanning position. In Fig. 2d, the character “T” marks the tumor core position; the character “V” indicates the depth of one feeding vessel of the tumor. The bright spots in Figs. 2d, 2f, 2h, at the positions indicated by the arrows in Fig. 2d, are the photoacoustic signals from accumulated nanoshells. These B-scan images reveal the depth information where nanoshells accumulate, which also indicate that the nanoshells distribute mainly around the tumor cortex. Similar results were observed on several mice. Most signals shown below the dash-dotted line (i.e., skull position) in Fig. 2d are skull-reflected photoacoustic signals. Absence of nanoshells within the tumor core is observed in Figs. 2d, 2f, 2h. We show that nanoshell accumulation is heterogeneous in tumors: largely absent from the tumor core and more concentrated within the tumor cortex, as shown in literature.12, 13 The difficulties in delivery of nanoparticles within tumor cores are possibly caused by both the high interstitial pressure and the avascularity of necrotic tumor cores.12, 13, 14 Time-dependent variation of absorption in the vessels and tumor foci attributable to the injected nanoshells can be observed via changes in photoacoustic signals. Figure 3 shows the averaged photoacoustic signals at vessels and tumor foci in the MAP images of Fig. 2, respectively, as a function of time. The results show the clearance and accumulation profiles of the nanoshells in vessels and tumor regions, respectively: nanoshells in the vessels are gradually cleared out by the reticuloendothelial system of the mouse, and those in the tumor foci are progressively taken up, owing to poor lymphatic drainage of the tumor (i.e., the enhanced permeability and retention effect). At after nanoshell injection, the contrast ratio of the tumor foci to the vessels is . In summary, by employing PAM, we successfully image extravasation of gold nanoshells from solid tumor vasculature in vivo. Using exogenous contrast from nanoshells, image contrast is significantly enhanced at , whether it is vessels or tumor foci. It is also found that nanoshell accumulation is heterogeneous in tumors. Because gold nanoshells have been recently applied to photothermal therapy for subcutaneous tumors, we anticipate that the integration of PAM into gold-nanoshell-based photothermal therapy to characterize and monitor the accumulation of gold nanoshells in solid tumors would be an invaluable aid.6, 7 In addition, by using bioconjugated gold nanoshells that target specific molecular signatures of disease, the technique presented here (i.e., PAM plus nanoshells) can potentially enable molecular imaging.15 AcknowledgmentsWe are grateful to Gina Lungu and Ovidiu Cracium for their assistance with cell culture and veterinary procedure, and to Jung-Taek Oh, Hao F. Zhang, and Konstantin Maslov for their technical advice and prior system development. This project is sponsored in part by the National Institutes of Health grants R01 EB000712 and R01 NS46214, and in part by the Advanced Technology Program at NIST, cooperative agreement 70NANB4H3040. ReferencesM. Xu and L. V. Wang,
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