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1H MRS-visible lipids accumulate during apoptosis of lymphoma cells in vitro and in vivo.

Abstract:
Proton MRS detection of cellular lipid accumulation has been suggested as a noninvasive method for detecting apoptosis or programmed cell death (PCD) in vivo. The spectral changes that have been observed in apoptotic cells include a general increase in lipid signals and a specific increase in the ratio of the lipid methylene-to-methyl peak intensities. These changes were investigated here following drug-induced apoptosis, both in vitro with a murine lymphoma cell line (EL-4) and in vivo following implantation of these cells to form subcutaneous tumors. Fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometric measurements with a lipophilic dye revealed an accumulation of cytoplasmic lipid droplets in isolated EL-4 cells undergoing etoposide-induced apoptosis. (1)H MR spectra (both diffusion-weighted (DW) and unweighted) showed an increase in lipid signals. However, the methylene/methyl peak ratio showed only minimal changes. Localized in vivo spectroscopy of EL-4 tumors also showed an increase in lipid signals, including a signal from polyunsaturated lipid at 2.8 ppm, after 16-24 h of drug treatment. Again there was no significant change in the methylene/methyl peak ratio. This study confirms that MRS-detectable lipids accumulate in tumor cells undergoing apoptosis, and therefore may be usable as a marker for the noninvasive detection of tumor cell apoptosis in the clinic.
Authors:
JE Schmitz, MI Kettunen, D-E Hu, KM Brindle
Journal:
Magn Reson Med
Citation info:
54(1):43-50
Publication date:
1st Jul 2005
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