Litcius/Paper detail

Highly Sensitive Early Diagnosis of Kidney Damage Using Renal Clearable Zwitterion‐Coated Ferrite Nanoprobe via Magnetic Resonance Imaging In Vivo

Ting Zhou, Yanzhi Dong, Xiaoyi Wang, Ruxia Liu, Ran Cheng, Jinbin Pan, Xuejun Zhang, Shao‐Kai Sun

2024Advanced Healthcare Materials10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Iron oxide nanoprobes exhibit substantial potential in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of kidney diseases and can eliminate the nephrotoxicity of gadolinium‐based contrast agents (GBCAs). Nevertheless, there is an extreme shortage of highly sensitive and renal clearable iron oxide nanoprobes suitable for early kidney damage detection through MRI. Herein, a renal clearable ultra‐small ferrite nanoprobe (UMFNPs@ZDS) is proposed for highly sensitive early diagnosis of kidney damage via structural and functional MRI in vivo for the first time. The nanoprobe comprises a ferrite core coated with a zwitterionic layer, and possesses a high T 1 relaxivity (12.52 m m −1 s −1 ), a small hydrodynamic size (6.43 nm), remarkable water solubility, excellent biocompatibility, and impressive renal clearable ability. In a rat model of unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO), the nanoprobe‐based MRI can not only accurately visualize the locations of renal injury, but also provide comprehensive functional data including peak value, peak time, relative renal function (RRF), and clearance percentage via MRI. The findings prove the immense potential of ferrite nanoprobes as a superior alternative to GBCAs for the early diagnosis of kidney damage.

Topics & Concepts

NanoprobeMaterials scienceMagnetic resonance imagingIn vivoKidneyBiocompatibilityNuclear magnetic resonanceBiomedical engineeringNanotechnologyMedicineNanoparticleRadiologyMetallurgyInternal medicineBiologyPhysicsBiotechnologyAcute Kidney Injury ResearchMRI in cancer diagnosisRenal and Vascular Pathologies