Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of magnetically labeled stem cells has become a valuable tool in the understanding and evaluation of experimental stem cell–based therapies of degenerative central nervous system disorders. This comprehensive study assesses the impact of magnetic labeling of both hum...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Albrecht Stroh, Johannes Boltze, Katharina Sieland, Katharina Hild, Cindy Gutzeit, Tobias Jung, Jenny Kressel, Susann Hau, Doreen Reich, Tilman Grune, Claus Zimmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi - SAGE Publishing 2009-05-01
Series:Molecular Imaging
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2310/7290.2009.00017
id doaj-0fa4cc06d1864d6ba50a64ac9b5fb6e6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0fa4cc06d1864d6ba50a64ac9b5fb6e62021-04-02T12:18:52ZengHindawi - SAGE PublishingMolecular Imaging1536-01212009-05-01810.2310/7290.2009.0001710.2310_7290.2009.00017Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson DiseaseAlbrecht StrohJohannes BoltzeKatharina SielandKatharina HildCindy GutzeitTobias JungJenny KresselSusann HauDoreen ReichTilman GruneClaus ZimmerMagnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of magnetically labeled stem cells has become a valuable tool in the understanding and evaluation of experimental stem cell–based therapies of degenerative central nervous system disorders. This comprehensive study assesses the impact of magnetic labeling of both human and rodent stem cell–containing populations on multiple biologic parameters as maintenance of stemness and oxidative stress levels. Cells were efficiently magnetically labeled with very small superparamagnetic iron oxide particles. Only under the condition of tailored labeling strategies can the impact of magnetic labeling on vitality, proliferation, pluripotency, and oxidative stress levels be minimized. In a rat model of Parkinson disease, magnetically labeled mouse embryonic stem cells were tracked by high-field MRI for 6 months. Significant interindividual differences concerning the spatial distribution of cells became evident. Histologically, transplanted green fluorescent protein–positive iron oxide–labeled cells were clearly identified. No significant increase in oxidative stress levels at the implantation site and no secondary uptake of magnetic label by host phagocytotic cells were observed. Our study strongly suggests that molecular MRI approaches must be carefully tailored to the respective cell population to exert minimal physiologic impact, ensuring the feasibility of this imaging approach for clinical applications.https://doi.org/10.2310/7290.2009.00017
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Albrecht Stroh
Johannes Boltze
Katharina Sieland
Katharina Hild
Cindy Gutzeit
Tobias Jung
Jenny Kressel
Susann Hau
Doreen Reich
Tilman Grune
Claus Zimmer
spellingShingle Albrecht Stroh
Johannes Boltze
Katharina Sieland
Katharina Hild
Cindy Gutzeit
Tobias Jung
Jenny Kressel
Susann Hau
Doreen Reich
Tilman Grune
Claus Zimmer
Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
Molecular Imaging
author_facet Albrecht Stroh
Johannes Boltze
Katharina Sieland
Katharina Hild
Cindy Gutzeit
Tobias Jung
Jenny Kressel
Susann Hau
Doreen Reich
Tilman Grune
Claus Zimmer
author_sort Albrecht Stroh
title Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
title_short Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
title_full Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
title_fullStr Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Magnetic Labeling on Human and Mouse Stem Cells and Their Long-Term Magnetic Resonance Tracking in a Rat Model of Parkinson Disease
title_sort impact of magnetic labeling on human and mouse stem cells and their long-term magnetic resonance tracking in a rat model of parkinson disease
publisher Hindawi - SAGE Publishing
series Molecular Imaging
issn 1536-0121
publishDate 2009-05-01
description Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of magnetically labeled stem cells has become a valuable tool in the understanding and evaluation of experimental stem cell–based therapies of degenerative central nervous system disorders. This comprehensive study assesses the impact of magnetic labeling of both human and rodent stem cell–containing populations on multiple biologic parameters as maintenance of stemness and oxidative stress levels. Cells were efficiently magnetically labeled with very small superparamagnetic iron oxide particles. Only under the condition of tailored labeling strategies can the impact of magnetic labeling on vitality, proliferation, pluripotency, and oxidative stress levels be minimized. In a rat model of Parkinson disease, magnetically labeled mouse embryonic stem cells were tracked by high-field MRI for 6 months. Significant interindividual differences concerning the spatial distribution of cells became evident. Histologically, transplanted green fluorescent protein–positive iron oxide–labeled cells were clearly identified. No significant increase in oxidative stress levels at the implantation site and no secondary uptake of magnetic label by host phagocytotic cells were observed. Our study strongly suggests that molecular MRI approaches must be carefully tailored to the respective cell population to exert minimal physiologic impact, ensuring the feasibility of this imaging approach for clinical applications.
url https://doi.org/10.2310/7290.2009.00017
work_keys_str_mv AT albrechtstroh impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT johannesboltze impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT katharinasieland impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT katharinahild impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT cindygutzeit impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT tobiasjung impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT jennykressel impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT susannhau impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT doreenreich impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT tilmangrune impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
AT clauszimmer impactofmagneticlabelingonhumanandmousestemcellsandtheirlongtermmagneticresonancetrackinginaratmodelofparkinsondisease
_version_ 1721569431059955712