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      Anatomy, Functionality, and Neuronal Connectivity with Manganese Radiotracers for Positron Emission Tomography

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          Abstract

          Manganese ion has been extensively used as a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent in pre-clinical studies to assess tissue anatomy, function and neuronal connectivity. Unfortunately, its use in human studies has been limited by cellular toxicity and the need to use a very low dose. The much higher sensitivity of positron emission tomography (PET) over MRI enables the use of lower concentrations of manganese, potentially expanding the methodology to humans. PET tracers manganese-51 (Mn-51, t 1/2 = 46 min) and manganese-52 (Mn-52, t 1/2 = 5.6 days), were used in this study. The biodistribution of manganese in animals in the brain and other tissues was studied as well as the uptake in the pancreas after glucose stimulation as a functional assay. Finally, neuronal connectivity in the olfactory pathway following nasal administration of the divalent radioactive Mn-52 ([ 52 Mn]Mn 2+ ) was imaged. PET imaging with the divalent radioactive Mn-51 ([ 51 Mn]Mn 2+ ) and [ 52 Mn]Mn 2+ in both rodents and monkeys demonstrates that the accumulation of activity in different organs is similar to that observed in rodent MRI studies following systemic administration. Furthermore, we demonstrated the ability of manganese to enter excitable cells. We followed activity-induced [ 51 Mn]Mn 2+ accumulation in the pancreas after glucose stimulation, and showed that [ 52 Mn]Mn 2+ can be used to trace neuronal connections analogous to manganese enhanced MRI neuronal tracing studies. The results were consistent with manganese enhanced MRI studies, despite the much lower manganese concentration used for PET (100 mM Mn 2+ for MRI compared to ~0.05 mM for PET). This indicates that uptake and transport mechanisms are comparable even at low PET doses. This helps establish the use of manganese-based radiotracers in both pre-clinical and clinical studies to assess anatomy, function and connectivity.

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          Most cited references39

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          Chronic manganese poisoning. Clinical picture and manganese turnover.

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            Uptake of manganese and cadmium from the nasal mucosa into the central nervous system via olfactory pathways in rats.

            In the olfactory epithelium the primary olfactory neurones are in contact with the environment and via the axonal projections they are also connected to the olfactory bulbs of the brain. Therefore, the primary olfactory neurones provide a pathway by which foreign materials may gain access to the brain. In the present study we used autoradiography and gamma spectrometry to show that intranasal instillation of manganese (54Mn2+) in rats results in initial uptake of the metal in the olfactory bulbs. The metal was then seen to migrate via secondary and tertiary olfactory pathways and via further connections into most parts of the brain and also to the spinal cord. Intranasal instillation of cadmium (109Cd2+) resulted in uptake of the metal in the anterior parts of the olfactory bulbs but not in other areas of the brain. This indicates that this metal is unable to pass the synapses between the primary and secondary olfactory neurones in the bulbs. Intraperitoneal administration of 54Mn2+ or 109Cd2+ showed low uptake of the metals in the olfactory bulbs, an uptake not different from the rest of the brain. Manganese is a neurotoxic metal which in man can induce an extrapyramidal motor system dysfunction associated with occupational inhalation of manganese-containing dusts or fumes. We propose that the neurotoxicity of inhaled manganese is related to an uptake of the metal into the brain via the olfactory pathways. In this way manganese can circumvent the blood-brain barrier and gain direct access to the central nervous system.
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              Magnetic resonance imaging of neuronal connections in the macaque monkey.

              Recently, an MRI-detectable, neuronal tract-tracing method in living animals was introduced that exploits the anterograde transport of manganese (Mn2+). We present the results of experiments simultaneously tracing manganese chloride and wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) to evaluate the specificity of the former by tracing the neuronal connections of the basal ganglia of the monkey. Mn2+ and WGA-HRP yielded remarkably similar and highly specific projection patterns. By showing the sequential transport of Mn2+ from striatum to pallidum-substantia nigra and then to thalamus, we demonstrated MRI visualization of transport across at least one synapse in the CNS of the primate. Transsynaptic tract tracing in living primates will allow chronic studies of development and plasticity and provide valuable anatomical information for fMRI and electrophysiological experiments in primates.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Molecular Imaging and Biology
                Mol Imaging Biol
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1536-1632
                1860-2002
                August 2018
                February 2 2018
                August 2018
                : 20
                : 4
                : 562-574
                Article
                10.1007/s11307-018-1162-6
                1f8ae195-1e22-4229-ac1c-25cf2b5b9e3d
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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