[HTML][HTML] Molecular imaging of oxidized collagen quantifies pulmonary and hepatic fibrogenesis

HH Chen, PA Waghorn, L Wei, LF Tapias, DT Schühle… - JCI insight, 2017 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
HH Chen, PA Waghorn, L Wei, LF Tapias, DT Schühle, NJ Rotile, CM Jones, RJ Looby…
JCI insight, 2017ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Fibrosis results from the dysregulation of tissue repair mechanisms affecting major organ
systems, leading to chronic extracellular matrix buildup, and progressive, often fatal, organ
failure. Current diagnosis relies on invasive biopsies. Noninvasive methods today cannot
distinguish actively progressive fibrogenesis from stable scar, and thus are insensitive for
monitoring disease activity or therapeutic responses. Collagen oxidation is a universal
signature of active fibrogenesis that precedes collagen crosslinking. Biochemically targeting …
Abstract
Fibrosis results from the dysregulation of tissue repair mechanisms affecting major organ systems, leading to chronic extracellular matrix buildup, and progressive, often fatal, organ failure. Current diagnosis relies on invasive biopsies. Noninvasive methods today cannot distinguish actively progressive fibrogenesis from stable scar, and thus are insensitive for monitoring disease activity or therapeutic responses. Collagen oxidation is a universal signature of active fibrogenesis that precedes collagen crosslinking. Biochemically targeting oxidized lysine residues formed by the action of lysyl oxidase on collagen with a small-molecule gadolinium chelate enables targeted molecular magnetic resonance imaging. This noninvasive direct biochemical elucidation of the fibrotic microenvironment specifically and robustly detected and staged pulmonary and hepatic fibrosis progression, and monitored therapeutic response in animal models. Furthermore, this paradigm is translatable and generally applicable to diverse fibroproliferative disorders.
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