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    • Cover Image - Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology, Volume 49, Issue 5
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  • Special Collection: Molecular Imaging
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  • Research Article3
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  • Review

    Seeing the Invisible—Ultrasound Molecular Imaging

    Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
    Vol. 46Issue 3p479–497Published online: December 30, 2019
    • Alexandra Kosareva
    • Lotfi Abou-Elkacem
    • Sayan Chowdhury
    • Jonathan R. Lindner
    • Beat A. Kaufmann
    Cited in Scopus: 28
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      Ultrasound molecular imaging has been developed in the past two decades with the goal of non-invasively imaging disease phenotypes on a cellular level not depicted on anatomic imaging. Such techniques already play a role in pre-clinical research for the assessment of disease mechanisms and drug effects, and are thought to in the future contribute to earlier diagnosis of disease, assessment of therapeutic effects and patient-tailored therapy in the clinical field. In this review, we first describe the chemical composition and structure as well as the in vivo behavior of the ultrasound contrast agents that have been developed for molecular imaging.
      Seeing the Invisible—Ultrasound Molecular Imaging
    • Original Contribution

      Development of a Translatable Ultrasound Molecular Imaging Agent for Inflammation

      Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
      Vol. 46Issue 3p690–702Published online: December 30, 2019
      • Alice Luong
      • Dan Smith
      • Chia-Hung Tai
      • Bruno Cotter
      • Colin Luo
      • Monet Strachan
      • and others
      Cited in Scopus: 5
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        This study details the development, characterization and non-clinical efficacy of an ultrasound molecular imaging agent intended for molecular imaging of P-selectin in humans. A targeting ligand based on a recently discovered human selectin ligand was manufactured as fusion protein, and activity for human and mouse P- and E-selectin was evaluated by functional immunoassay. The targeting ligand was covalently conjugated to a lipophilic anchor inserted into a phospholipid microbubble shell. Three lots of the targeted microbubble drug product, TS-07-009, were produced, and assays for size distribution, zeta potential and morphology were established.
        Development of a Translatable Ultrasound Molecular Imaging Agent for Inflammation
      • Original Contribution

        Surface Modification with Lactadherin Augments the Attachment of Sonazoid Microbubbles to Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa

        Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
        Vol. 45Issue 6p1455–1465Published online: March 8, 2019
        • Kentaro Otani
        • Atsunori Kamiya
        • Takahiro Miyazaki
        • Ayumi Koga
        • Ayako Inatomi
        • Mariko Harada-Shiba
        Cited in Scopus: 5
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          Arginine–glycine–aspartate (RGD)-carrying microbubbles (MBs) have been utilized as a specific contrast agent for glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (αIIbβ3 integrin)-expressing activated platelets in ultrasound molecular imaging. Recently, we found that surface modification with lactadherin provides the RGD motif on the surface of phosphatidylserine-containing clinically available MBs, Sonazoid. Here, we examined the potential of lactadherin-bearing Sonazoid MBs to be targeted MBs for glycoprotein IIb/IIIa using the custom-designed in vitro settings with recombinant αIIbβ3 integrin, activated platelets or erythrocyte-rich human clots.
          Surface Modification with Lactadherin Augments the Attachment of Sonazoid Microbubbles to Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa
        • Original Contribution

          Ultrasound Molecular Imaging of Atherosclerosis Using Small-Peptide Targeting Ligands Against Endothelial Markers of Inflammation and Oxidative Stress

          Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
          Vol. 44Issue 6p1155–1163Published online: March 13, 2018
          • Federico Moccetti
          • Craig C. Weinkauf
          • Brian P. Davidson
          • J. Todd Belcik
          • Edmund R. Marinelli
          • Evan Unger
          • and others
          Cited in Scopus: 23
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            The aim of this study was to evaluate a panel of endothelium-targeted microbubble (MB) ultrasound contrast agents bearing small peptide ligands as a human-ready approach for molecular imaging of markers of high-risk atherosclerotic plaque. Small peptide ligands with established affinity for human P-selectin, VCAM-1, LOX-1 and von Willebrand factor (VWF) were conjugated to the surface of lipid-stabilized MBs. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) molecular imaging of the thoracic aorta was performed in wild-type and gene-targeted mice with advanced atherosclerosis (DKO).
            Ultrasound Molecular Imaging of Atherosclerosis Using Small-Peptide Targeting Ligands Against Endothelial Markers of Inflammation and Oxidative Stress
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